Kuwait Times

Turkish parties rally together

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ISTANBUL: Tens of thousands of supporters of Turkey’s ruling and main opposition parties, usually bitter foes, rallied together yesterday in support of democracy following a failed military coup as President Tayyip Erdogan tightens his grip on the country. Demonstrat­ors held a cross-party “Republic and Democracy” rally in Istanbul’s central Taksim Square in a spirit of unity following the failed coup, in which at least 246 people were killed and more than 2,000 injured.

In a rare move, pro-government channels broadcast a live speech from the podium by main opposition leader Kemal Kilicdarog­lu. “This is a day to unite, a day to stand up against coups and dictatoria­l regimes, a day to let the voice of the people be heard,” he said at the rally, organized by his secularist opposition CHP but also backed by the ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party and by other opposition groups. “We are all together in Taksim today. Today is a day we made history all together.” Prime Minister Binali Yildirim tweeted that “this country’s Turks, Kurds, Alevis” and supporters of the major opposition parties “united together and gave the lesson needed to the putschists”.

Erdogan will probably try to capitalize on the large size of the crowd of all political persuasion­s to try and reassert full control over the country, a NATO ally and an important partner in the US-led fight against Islamic State. In another demonstrat­ion of unity after the coup, which was staged by a faction within the armed forces, the head of Turkey’s air force issued a rare statement stressing “absolute obedience” to the chief of the military General Staff. Some members of the air force were involved in the coup. The chief of the military General Staff, Hulusi Akar, who was held hostage by the plotters on the night of July 15, condemned the plotters yesterday as “cowards in uniform” who had greatly harmed the nation and the army.

Erdogan, who narrowly escaped capture and possible death during the attempted coup, has declared a state of emergency, allowing him to sign laws without prior parliament­ary approval in a drive to root out supporters of the coup. His critics fear he is using the abortive coup to wage an indiscrimi­nate crackdown on dissent. Turkish authoritie­s have suspended, detained or placed under investigat­ion more than 60,000 soldiers, police, judges, teachers, civil servants and others in the past week. Yildirim said on Saturday authoritie­s had taken around 13,000 people into custody over the coup attempt, including 8,831 soldiers. He pledged they would have a fair trial.

Rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal said it had received credible evidence of detainees being subjected to beatings and torture, including rape, since the coup attempt. “It is absolutely imperative that the Turkish authoritie­s halt these abhorrent practices and allow internatio­nal monitors to visit all these detainees in the places they are being held,” said Amnesty’s Europe director John Dalhuisen in a statement. In Ankara, a senior official denied Amnesty’s claims, saying: “The idea that Turkey, a country seeking European Union membership, would not respect the law is absurd. We categorica­lly deny the allegation­s and encourage advocacy groups to provide an unbiased account of the legal steps that are being taken against people who murdered nearly 250 civilians in cold blood.”

Turkey has undergone a seismic shift since the night of violence when renegade soldiers sought to topple Erdogan but were stopped by crowds of civilians and loyalist security forces. In the latest reaction, Yildirim said Turkey would disband Erdogan’s 2,500-strong Presidenti­al Guard, almost 300 of whose members have been detained. Under new emergency powers, those detained can be held without charge for 30 days, a move Amnesty said increased the risk of torture or other maltreatme­nt of detainees.

But for now, the crackdown appears to be broadly popular. “The state of emergency is a good thing and it’s good that many people have been arrested and that the length of detentions has been extended,” said demonstrat­or Harun Kalyancu, 34, a furniture designer and supporter of the ruling party. “If people lost their jobs they must be guilty.” Zuhal Tolbert, 56, who is retired, said the government should be more inclusive. “The government has to think about the mistakes they have made they have to think about the other half of the population. (who did not vote for them),” she said. “We all have to come together.”

Erdogan has accused US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who has many followers in Turkey, of mastermind­ing the abortive coup. In his first decree Erdogan ordered the closure of thousands of private schools, charities and foundation­s with suspected links to Gulen, who denies involvemen­t in the coup. The CHP and other political parties swiftly joined the ruling Islamist-rooted AKP in condemning the coup attempt, mindful of four other military interventi­ons in Turkey in the past 60 years. The last full-scale coup in 1980 led to mass arrests of politician­s and others, torture and executions.

Taksim Square, like much of Istanbul and other cities, is awash with Turkish flags and CHP supporters were also carrying pictures of their hero Kemal Ataturk, the soldier who founded the secular republic on the ashes of the Ottoman Empire in 1923. Supporters of Erdogan’s AKP, which has ruled Turkey since 2002, have generally tended to use religious symbols and rhetoric. But the coup has united both sides in a blaze of nationalis­t fervor. Istanbul’s AKP mayor, Kadir Toptas, has provided free public transport for the rally.

Opposition parties have mixed backing for purging coup supporters with calls for reconcilia­tion and restraint. “Turkey should completely be purified from the rule of the putsch,” said a “Taksim Declaratio­n” issued by the CHP’s Kilicdarog­lu. “The state should not be governed by anger and revenge. The culprits of the putsch should be tried lawfully with the understand­ing of abiding by the rule of law,” it added. Turkey’s Supreme Military Council (YAS) will meet under Erdogan’s supervisio­n on July 28. Erdogan told Reuters in an interview on Thursday that he would restructur­e the armed forces and bring in “fresh blood”. After the coup, Western countries pledged support for democracy in Turkey, but have also expressed concern over the scale of subsequent purges of state institutio­ns. — Agencies

 ?? — AFP ?? ISTANBUL: People wave Turkish flags and portraits of modern Turkey’s founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, during a rally yesterday in Taksim Square.
— AFP ISTANBUL: People wave Turkish flags and portraits of modern Turkey’s founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, during a rally yesterday in Taksim Square.

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