USA TODAY US Edition

Anti-alcohol bill leaves many Turks dispirited

Prime minister wants to restrict sales, advertisin­g

- Jacob Resneck

I STANBUL Turkey is about to enact the strictest alcohol laws in the republic’s 89-year history in a move that some Turks complain is part of a creeping Islamist agenda.

The bill supported by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan would prohibit the sale of alcohol from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and forbid the depiction of alcohol consumptio­n on television, billboards, newspapers, storefront­s and at festivals. Liquor sales within 100 yards of a school or mosque would be banned.

Erdogan insists the measure is intended to protect public health and not an attempt to legislate morals or force Islamic strictures on a state that has been largely secular for decades until the rise of the dominant Justice and Developmen­t Party.

“The regulation does not interfere with anyone’s lifestyle,” Erdogan said in a televised address Tuesday. “If you are going to drink, then get your drink and drink at home. We are not against it.”

Some Muslims believe alcohol is a violation of the faith. Though Turkey has a Muslim majority, its constituti­on enshrines secular values.

Since coming to power a decade ago, Erdogan’s government has increased alcohol taxes more than threefold, removed alcoholic drinks on domestic flights of Turkey’s flagship carrier Turkish Airlines and removed a ban on head scarves. Erdogan lashed out at “tipsy youth” as the reason for prohibitio­ns. He has said he wants to build a “devout” generation in Turkey.

Along that line, more than 17,000 mosques have been built in Turkey at state direction in the past decade. In many cities, that means the ban on serving alcohol near a mosque may shut down liquor sales in many restaurant­s, bars and markets in city centers. Some restaurant­s have withdrawn alcohol in preparatio­n for the ban.

Beer and wine were taken off the menu two weeks ago at a restaurant frequented by tourists between two mosques across from Istanbul’s iconic Galata Tower.

Business leaders warn that the rules will damage the tourism indus- try, a major source of revenue for a significan­t segment of the population. The industry brings in as much as $50 billion in annual revenue.

Turkey’s Associatio­n of Tourism, Restaurant Investors and Managers released a statement warning of “irreversib­le damage” to the country’s image. It noted that per capita alcohol consumptio­n is about 1.5 liters a year — a fraction of the European average. The government, the group said, has been “conjuring up a fear of alcoholism that does not exist.”

When the sweeping bill against alcohol was introduced into the parliament, debate was limited to two days. The ruling party forced an early vote on the measure, prompting many opposition lawmakers to walk out in protest after a 17-hour debate that stretched into the early morning hours.

Yusuf Alatas, a human rights lawyer, said the ruling party has steamrolle­d critics and forced sweeping changes with little debate on issues that split the country and alter its modern history of non-religious rule. He said the passage of the alcohol restrictio­ns is part of an Islamist agenda to establish religious law.

“The (ruling party) has more than 51% of the vote — in a democracy, that’s a lot of power,” Alatas said. “They should be respecting minority opinion a lot more than they are right now.”

He said there’s a worrying trend of lawmakers trying to legislate morals. “The state should not decide on how people live their lives,” he said.

 ?? People toast with beer and Raki, a traditiona­l Turkish alcoholic drink, on March 16 in Istanbul.
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People toast with beer and Raki, a traditiona­l Turkish alcoholic drink, on March 16 in Istanbul. AP
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AP Erdogan

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