The battle for Turkey: can Selahattin Demirtas pull the country back from the brink of civil war?
In the autumn of 1990, 16 years into the Kurdistan Workers party’s
(PKK) insurgency against the Turkish state, a political activist named
Vedat Aydin rose to his feet to address a human rights conference in the
capital, Ankara. When Aydin began to speak, it was not in Turkish, the
official language of the state, but Kurmanji, a Kurdish dialect that had
for decades been effectively banned in public places. The result of
this gesture was pandemonium. The moderator of the conference demanded
that Aydin switch to Turkish; a fellow Kurd came mischievously onto the
platform to translate. Around half those present walked out, and Aydin
was detained by police and briefly jailed.
Eight months later Aydin was arrested again, back home in the city of
Diyarbakir, in what is effectively the capital of Turkish Kurdistan.
Two days after that, his mutilated body was discovered in the
countryside outside the city.
Turkish security forces perpetrated thousands of
extra-judicial executions of Kurdish activists in the 1990s – along with
village clearances and torture on a massive scale – but few provoked
the anger of ordinary Kurds
more than the killing of the man who had achieved notoriety by standing
up to the linguistic proscriptions of the state. On 5 July, 1991, the
day of Aydin’s funeral, they came out in their tens of thousands in
Diyarbakir.
Among the mourners that day was an 18-year-old local boy called
Selahattin Demirtaş, the second son of a plumber and his wife who had
given their seven children as stable an upbringing as they could manage
in the dirt-poor regional capital.
To Tahir and Sadiye Demirtaş this had meant acquiescing to the
official claim that all citizens of the country, bar a few tiny
minorities, were Turks. It was only from school friends that Selahattin
had learned of the existence of the Kurds, a people that had been living
on the mountainous intersection of Mesopotamia and Asia Minor long
before the first incursions by Turkish nomads in the 11th century. State
propaganda and the collusion of his parents had left Demirtaş unsure as
to whether he was a Turk or a Kurd. On 5 July all ambiguity was
removed.
The first that Demirtaş saw of the violence that day was when he was
swept up in a wave of youngsters being chased by plainclothes policemen
wielding planks of wood. Later on, as he recalled in an interview last
year with a Turkish newspaper, “they opened fire on the crowd from all
sides … the wounded couldn’t be treated because if they went to hospital
they would be arrested. And despite all this the newspapers depicted
the people of Diyarbakir as responsible for what happened!”
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According
to the government, eight people were killed that day. Kurdish sources
put the figure at more than 20. For Demirtaş, the Diyarbakir killings
were an epiphany of the kind that hundreds of thousands of Kurds have
experienced over the past 40 years – generally in response to a
government atrocity. Such incidents have secured continuous support for
the PKK’s war against the Turkish state. “That day,” Demirtaş has said,
“I became a different person. My life’s course changed … although I
didn’t fully understand the reason behind the events, now I knew: we
were Kurds, and since this wasn’t an identity I would toss away, this
was also my problem.”
A quarter of a century later, Demirtaş is the embodiment of the Kurds’ political aspirations in Turkey.
He is also the exponent of an inclusive politics that is startlingly
new, and that owes much to the liberal traditions of the west – so much,
in fact, that an admiring ambassador in Ankara recently described him
to me as “the only Turkish politician that would not be out of place in a
European capital”. But Demirtaş is also the civilian adjunct of a
brutal armed movement, caught between bomb and ballot box – a man in the
middle.
Since 1984 the PKK, which most western governments consider a
terrorist organisation, has been waging an armed insurgency that aimed
at first to prise much of southeastern Turkey from the Turks, though
autonomy has latterly become the goal. In a conflict that has taken more
than 40,000 lives, destroying communities and families from central
Anatolia to the Armenian border, Demirtaş is advocate-in-chief for the
peaceful solution that many on the government side – and some on his own
– demonstrably do not want. And those Kurdish sceptics of peace may
include his own elder brother, Nurettin, who served 12 years in a
Turkish jail for membership of the PKK’s youth wing and is now believed
to be fighting somewhere in Syria or Iraq. (Demirtaş professes ignorance
of his brother’s precise whereabouts.)
In 2014, Demirtaş helped found the Peoples’ Democratic party (HDP),
the latest in a long line of Kurdish nationalist parties – with the
crucial difference that this one has become a major player on the
national stage. In the general election of this June, the HDP became the
first such party to surpass the 10% threshold required for
parliamentary representation. The HDP’s 13% of the vote secured it 80
seats out of 550 in the Ankara parliament, and prompted the country’s
president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, to insist on a rerun that is to be held on 1 November.
One of the reasons why Demirtaş has caused Erdoğan much anxiety is
that he is more than simply a Kurdish nationalist. He is pushing for a
wider liberalisation of the country that would change conditions for all
Turkish citizens, empowering minorities and ending the monolithic
“national” identity on which Erdoğan and his Justice and Development
party (AKP), have built 13 years of electoral success.
Narendra Modi and even Vladimir Putin would recognise Erdoğan’s
majoritarian tactics – if not its religious and ethnic nuances.
Erdogan’s belief is that Turkey is made up overwhelmingly of ethnic
Turks who are also pious Sunni Muslims; Demirtaş has identified all
those who do not fit in as his natural constituency. Nothing less than
the future of Erdoğan and his conception of Turkey are up for
consideration when more than 50 million voters go to the polls, and
Selahattin Demirtaş is a big reason why.
* * *
Earlier this month, I spent a day following Demirtaş
around Istanbul, where his constituency lies. A few days before, dozens
of his HDP colleagues and supporters had been blown to pieces in a
double suicide bombing, apparently carried out by Isis, as they attended
a peace march in Ankara. The death toll was 102, making it the worst
terrorist outrage in Turkish history. The bombings had clearly been
designed to throw the election into chaos – Demirtaş accused the state
of collusion – but no one was sure exactly what their effects would be.
Demirtaş cancelled all party rallies and interviews with the foreign
press, mine included. The rest of the campaign would be fought in
mourning and a heightened atmosphere of fear and insecurity.
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In
person, Demirtaş looks younger than his 43 years, with hardly a wrinkle
and a full head of black hair, but his smile is older, slower, and
impressed with pain. Because it exhibits none of the cynicism one
associates with politicians’ smiles, it is peculiarly powerful,
emanating from expressive dark eyes, then spreading over a handsome,
wide-open face.
Again in contrast with many politicians in Turkey, Demirtaş does not
shout or fulminate when delivering speeches. And he impresses even his
opponents with his intelligence. A friend of mine who had been an
adviser to Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, the leader of the main opposition party,
described the aftermath of the first meeting between the two men. “When
Kemal came out of the meeting,” my friend related, “he looked
astonished. He said, ‘Phew! that man’s sharp!’’’
On the day I spent with him, Demirtaş arrived at his first meeting in
the official Mercedes Benz that it is his privilege as a party leader
to use. When getting out of the car he buttoned the jacket of his blue
suit fastidiously, before shaking the hands of wellwishers. Taking his
seat at a table inside, nodding at the welcome of his hosts, an
association of Shia Muslims, he unbuttoned his jacket again. It’s a way
of protecting his good suit – as he himself jokes, his campaign is
penniless – but there may also be an element of vanity.
That afternoon we went to a meeting of a cultural centre in the
middle of town. Some policemen saw the crowd that had gathered around
Demirtaş and made this an excuse for a fracas, with the police pushing
the Kurds and the Kurds pushing back. “How rude!” one of the women
exclaimed at some obscenity she had heard from one of the policemen.
The meeting room was packed with about 150 supporters. The head of
the cultural centre had trouble controlling his breathing as he tried to
introduce himself and his colleagues. “I’m excited,” he managed to say.
“I am too,” Demirtaş replied. There was a ripple of sympathetic
laughter and everyone relaxed.
Demirtaş said a few words. He was building, he said, a “union of the
crushed”, which would not simply incorporate the Kurds, but others who
have been excluded. A middle-aged woman with short blonde hair indicated
she wanted to speak. She introduced herself as a teacher in Sariyer, a
wealthy suburb. She was of the generation of Turks that had been brought
up to despise the twin menaces of Kurdish nationalism and political
Islam – the sort of person who until quite recently would not have
contemplated talking congenially with a Kurdish nationalist linked to a
terrorist organisation.
But 13 years of AKP rule, with their sour fruits of authoritarianism,
corruption, and a leader who seems to regard himself as indispensable,
have changed things.
“I’ll be voting HDP come November 1,” the woman announced brightly.
“And so will a lot of my friends. You’ll be pleasantly surprised by the
number of votes you get!”
The warmth of Demirtaş’s response did not suggest that he looked at
her as the symbol of a state that had for years put him down, belittled
him, denied he existed. Outside the meeting, an admirer told me: “It may
take a few years, but you just watch: he’ll rise the same way Erdoğan
did.”
* * *
It was only an accident of fate that spared Demirtaş
from a brief, fizzling glory as a freedom fighter, and led him into
politics. As a 19-year-old, he was shamed into joining the guerrillas by
the barbed comments of his friends (“How come you’re still studying
when everyone else is heading for the hills?”), but his plan was
thwarted by the arrest of the PKK contact who was to take him to the
rebel camp. “I realised then,” he would recall, “that a political and
legal approach would be far more effective than armed struggle.”
The decision not to fight led Demirtaş to concentrate on his studies.
He read law at Ankara University, where he must have perfected the
efficient Turkish with which he has made his career. In 1998, he
qualified and returned to Diyarbakir, opened a legal practice, and began
taking on human rights cases. He was known as “Bones” for his tenacity
in recovering the bodies of dead PKK militants from the mountainsides
where they fell, and returning them in bodybags to their families for
burial. This hazardous pursuit tarred him as the ally of terrorists.
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He
also brokered deals between the PKK and the Turkish military, in one
case personally securing the release of a captured Turkish soldier from
militant hands. In 2004, he became head of the Diyarbakir branch of the
pro-PKK Human Rights Association – the same post Vedat Aydin had held
before his murder in 1991.
No matter where Demirtaş’s sympathies lay, no matter how trenchant
his criticism of the government’s human rights abuses, his work was
above all a day-to-day negotiation with the representatives of the
Turkish state: prosecutors and judges, soldiers, secret policemen.
Inevitably there was also frequent contact with local PKK commanders.
This is how Demirtaş found himself in the middle, where he remains
today – caught on the one hand between the state and the PKK, and on the
other, between advocates of violent and non-violent resistance.
Although diplomats who meet him in Ankara invariably urge him to
distance himself from the PKK, this would weaken his position within
Turkish politics, which depends on his relations with all parties.
For all that, “peace” is a word that comes up a lot in his
conversation and speeches, along with “solution”. In an allusion to his
(as yet, untested) ability to prevail over hawks in the PKK, he recently
described his party as the “only force that can bring about the PKK’s
disarmament”. It is a big claim for a politician whose constituency
includes millions of Kurds who also ardently support the PKK, and for
whose leader, Abdullah Öcalan, he expresses unwavering support.
For much of the period that Demirtaş has spent in active politics –
he first entered parliament in 2007 as an independent – the conditions
necessary for peace have been slowly coming into being. After the PKK
leader’s capture in 1999, Öcalan was sentenced to life imprisonment on
the island of Imrali, in the Sea of Marmara, saved from the gallows only
by pressure from the European Union. Rather than spit defiance, Öcalan
immediately renounced his goal of a separate Kurdistan and promised to
cooperate with the state.
In 2002 came another big change in the form of the election of
Erdoğan’s Islamist-leaning AKP – against the wishes of the secular,
militarist establishment, which had insisted that the Kurdish crisis
must be solved through force of arms. Since then, the AKP government has
shown remarkable staying power, and last year Erdoğan moved out of the
prime minister’s residence and up to the presidency. Over the same
period the AKP adopted a conciliatory approach to Kurdish nationalism,
drastically reducing army brutality and exploring a political
accommodation with the PKK, which responded with a series of ceasefires.
In 2013, after talks with the government, Öcalan announced that he
was withdrawing his fighters from Turkish territory into the Kurdish
region of northern Iraq, saying it was time for “weapons to be silenced
and for politics and ideas to speak”.
But the new process is now comatose, buried under the rubble of
Erdoğan’s ambition to shape the future of Syria according to Turkish
interests. The president’s policy towards the Syrian civil war was to
work for Assad’s removal at any price, and he supported several
opposition groups to this end. But this policy has failed, while a
Syrian Kurdish offshoot of the PKK, the Democratic Union party, or PYD,
has taken advantage of the fighting to seize large tracts of northern
Syria, where it has set up self-governing Kurdish enclaves, to the
intense irritation of Erdoğan and the Turkish military.
Turkey fears that the emergence of a Kurdish-run Rojava, as these
self-governing cantons are collectively called, will lead in time to a
border-straddling Kurdistan dominated by the PKK. Elements in the state
are widely alleged to have secretly armed Isis as a way to prevent this.
Erdoğan has withdrawn the hand of reconciliation he once extended to
the Kurds. At the end of last year he refused to aid the Kurdish defence
of Kobani, a town just across the Syrian border, when it was being
pulverised by Isis. Demirtaş reacted with fury to Erdoğan’s refusal to
open the border and allow arms across, and he appealed to his supporters
to protest – 40 people were killed in battles with the security forces
and a Kurdish Islamist group. Under extreme international pressure,
Erdoğan eventually opened the border and the course of the battle
changed. Hundreds of Kurds were killed and thousands were wounded, but
the town remained in Kurdish hands. Kobani was the Kurdish Stalingrad,
and its defence became a byword for heroism.
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Kobani
impressed on the Kurds that Erdoğan could not be trusted and that
anti-Kurdish feeling continued to burn brightly in the Turkish state.
Arguably, neither side could be trusted – despite the ceasefire of 2013,
and the HDP’s success in June’s election on a peace ticket, both the
army and the PKK had continued to stockpile, recruit and otherwise
prepare for a resumption of the fighting. All that was needed was a
spark.
That came on 20 July, when a suicide bomber
blew himself up in the border town of Suruç, killing 33 people – most
of them Kurds on their way to Kobani to help rebuild the town. In the
aftermath of the bombing, Demirtaş said that the attack had been
orchestrated by a deep-state organisation run from the presidential
palace. Erdoğan brought a suit for libel. The war resumed. In mid-October I was in the backstreets of
Diyarbakir’s old city, where Selahattin Demirtaş flicked walnuts as a
child (there was no money for marbles). I stepped around the rubble with
my Kurdish guide, and we ducked into doorways to avoid patrols of
soldiers that might not welcome a western journalist picking at Turkey’s
problems.
These backstreets had become the latest battleground in the struggle
between the Kurds and the Turkish state. In August, Kurdish nationalist
ward leaders in the old city announced the creation of an autonomous
administration that would brook no interference from appointed state
bodies. This was one of more than a dozen simultaneous experiments in
self-government that were declared across Turkey’s Kurdish-majority
southeast.
For the Turkish state, the establishment of these autonomous regions
was an unabashed attempt to replicate the cantons of Rojava on Turkish
soil. The military responded with operations involving thousands of men.
In the old city of Diyarbakir, the 60-odd armed men and boys who
defended the territory, digging trenches and piling sandbags, were no
match for the army’s armoured cars, rockets and snipers. After two days’
fighting that left several dead – including one pigeon-fancier
allegedly shot while scattering seed for his birds – the Kurdish rebels
were overrun.
Now the area wears the familiar aspect of the war-ghetto: the
shop-fronts smashed in, the streets bereft of men of working age (many
are now in jail), and seemingly no administration at all (the ward
leaders are also in jail). “See the strength of the Turk,” warns a large
graffito left by a Turkish soldier. Stencilled portraits of Öcalan are
still visible on the blasted walls.
My Kurdish escort, a member of the ward parliament, bridled when I
suggested that the declaration of self-government had been unwise and
the state’s reaction foreseeable. Every day, my companion said, the
Turks were bombing PKK camps in northern Iraq. They had even desecrated
the graves of PKK martyrs. Inside Turkey, the security forces had
stripped a female guerrilla, killed her and then shared photographs of
her corpse online. (The Turks have announced an investigation into the
incident.) Alongside his outrage I sensed the debt that many
non-combatants feel they owe the PKK. “Did they take to the hills for
nothing?” my guide asked angrily. “Suffer thirst and cold? Everything
has a price.”
What this “everything” is became clearer as I wandered around
Diyarbakir, a town that has changed since I was last here a decade ago.
Back then the town’s Kurdish character was furtive and suppressed. Now,
government offices have signs in Kurdish as well as Turkish, a prominent
square has been renamed after a rebel leader from the 1920s, and the
city is increasingly known by its Kurdish name, Amed. If you buy the
scarf of the local football club, you will find that this too has
changed its name – from Diyarbakirspor to Amedspor.
The changes have not only been linguistic, but social and economic.
Although poverty remains – many people in the walled old city seem close
to destitution – a considerable number of rural Kurds who migrated from
their villages have been able to exploit the opportunities that come
from living in a big regional centre. Education and hard work have
propelled the children of these people into the middle class – they work
in offices, live in well-appointed flats and buy quality Turkish brands
in the richer fringes of town.
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Demirtaş family is a good example of this upward mobility. Of the six
siblings still in Turkey, two are lawyers, two are teachers, one is a
graphic designer and another a textile engineer. Demirtaş’s wife Basak –
his childhood sweetheart, also from a poor family – is a teacher, and
to judge from the glossy portraits that a mass-circulation newspaper
printed last year of the couple with their two daughters, there is
little to distinguish this handsome, modern, white-toothed family from
many around the world.
Although the attempt to create an autonomous enclave had been a
failure, I found a new self-confidence among people in Diyarbakir, and
much of this derives from the Kurds’ regional successes. To the
heartening longevity of the Kurdish regional government in northern
Iraq, a de facto state since the first Gulf war, have now been added the
establishment of the Rojava cantons in Syria and the epic of Kobani.
My guide went on to tell me that no fewer than 22 members of his
family had joined the PKK in recent years. Three of them had fallen at
Kobani. But when I asked him what he thought of Selahattin Demirtaş, he
could not bring himself to praise him. I interpreted this as the
distaste of a man who is surrounded by guns and sacrifice for a man of
peace – who dons his keffiyeh to work the crowd but spends most of his
time in suit and tie, supping with the Turks in Ankara. It is a
sentiment that experts on the Kurdish situation have told me is
widespread.
“Individuals are not important,” my guide added, which is another way
of saying that only one individual is important to the Kurdish movement
– Abdullah Öcalan – and that no one else should get ideas above their
station.
Öcalan is a tyrannical leader whose hold over his followers is hard
for outsiders, including myself, to comprehend. The best explanation is
probably a negative one. Were it not for the PKK, which Öcalan launched
with the murder of two Turkish soldiers in 1984, it is possible that the
forced assimilation of the Kurds into mainstream Turkish society would
have advanced much further, and the epiphanies of Demirtaş and others
may not have happened.
Demirtaş’s relationship with Öcalan is crucial, given Öcalan’s
unchallenged position as a kind of “father” of the Kurdish nation. It is
also highly ambiguous. Demirtaş is one of a number of Kurdish
non-combatants who have been allowed to visit the guerrilla leader at
his island prison, and the formation of the HDP as a party promoting
democracy for all citizens is said to have been Öcalan’s idea.
Demirtaş insists that Öcalan should be freed and allowed to take his
place in the Kurdish political sphere, but that would lead to rivalry
between the two men. It would certainly have an impact on the HDP’s
attempts to attract non-Kurds – Öcalan’s long association with violence
makes him beyond the pale even for liberal Turks. Although he wouldn’t
say it, it is probably better for Demirtaş’s political project that
Öcalan remain on his island. Like Selahattin Demirtaş, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan rose
in politics as the representative of a downtrodden segment of society,
in his case those pious Sunni Turks who had for decades been persecuted
by the country’s secular establishment. Like Demirtaş, Erdoğan
proclaimed his desire to allow greater freedom and self-expression not
just for his own constituency, but for all neglected citizens of the
republic – including the Kurds, who in the mid-2000s voted for him in
large numbers.
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Erdoğan
gradually removed the army’s baleful influence over civilian politics,
which had manifested itself in no fewer than three coups since 1950. He
also opened negotiations to restore diplomatic relations with the old
enemy, Armenia, and enacted pro-democracy reforms that were designed to
bring Turkey into the European Union. Just as Demirtaş is the current
darling of the western ambassadors, so Erdoğan was a decade ago; the
ambassadors took it upon themselves to smooth his plebeian edges and
refine his worldview.
But at the first sign that his popularity was waning, as his Syria
policy began to fail, the pluralist Erdoğan became the majoritarian
Erdoğan. He abandoned his pro-democracy projects and began promoting a
binding Turkish-Sunni identity that regards minorities such as the
Kurds, the Alevis (a quasi Shia community numbering perhaps 13 million
people) and indeed any liberal or non-believer as a menace. His view of
the Armenians has soured to such an extent that before mentioning them
in an interview last year he deployed the Turkish equivalent of “pardon
my French”.
The first indication that Demirtaş’s recipe of peace and federalism
might present a threat to Erdoğan’s tarnished leadership came in the
2014 presidential election, when Demirtaş, running as the HDP candidate,
scored a creditable 10%. The HDP’s 13% in this June’s election ended
the AKP’s 13-year absolute majority in parliament and scotched Erdoğan’s
ambitions to increase the powers of the presidency. To a standing
ovation from his fellow MPs, in May Demirtaş publicly ruled out a deal
whereby the HDP would approve enhanced presidential powers for Erdoğan
in return for devolution and Kurdish rights. There would, he said, be no
“dirty bargaining … we will not allow you to be an executive
president.”
For Erdoğan, the threat posed by Demirtaş lies less in the almost
blanket support he enjoys among Kurdish voters, which is naturally
finite, than the almost one million non-Kurdish votes he picked up in
June, which could go up. Alevis, as well as members of the country’s
Shia, Christian and small regional minorities, have noted the HDP’s
pledge to release the country from the monopolistic understanding of the
country as a Turkish Sunni nation, and from a president whose appetite
for power is clearly undimmed. Then there are the liberals who took part
in the brave but ultimately futile demonstrations against Erdoğan in
Istanbul two years ago, women attracted to Demirtaş’s message of
equality of opportunity and zero tolerance of domestic violence (31 of
the party’s MPs are women), and gay people, hitherto neglected by most
of the Turkish body politic, but who receive lavish attention in the
party programme. Its inclusivity is what marks the HDP out from the
earlier Kurdish nationalist parties it has replaced, and while the idea
was approved by Öcalan, it is Demirtaş who implemented it.
Together these groups represent a potentially vast reservoir of HDP
voters, whose inherent squeamishness about favouring a Kurdish
nationalist party Demirtaş hopes in time to surmount.
But to do this he needs peace, and Erdoğan has taken the country in
the opposite direction. He clearly believes that a climate of chaos best
suits his design of winning back votes for the AKP. Since the Suruç
bombing in July, Turkey has been consumed in a fireball of violence that
is reminiscent of the war’s zenith in the 1990s. According to Turkey’s Human Rights Association,
the death toll for the first nine months of this year was 407 (the
overwhelming majority of these deaths came after Suruç), while 3,500
people were arrested. As documented recently by Human Rights Watch,
beatings and other abuses are being administered against detainees, a
scourge that Turkey appeared to have put behind it a decade ago.
At the same time, the state has been diligently undermining the HDP’s
ability to fight an election campaign, with Turkish nationalist mobs
torching party offices around the country (the perpetrators are never
caught), a de facto embargo observed by much of the media, and dozens of
local Kurdish administrators removed from their posts.
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Although
the PKK returned to its fighting ways after Suruç – its first operation
was to plant a car bomb that killed two soldiers – its commanders had
clearly not anticipated Erdoğan’s willingness to wage total war in the
runup to November’s election. In October, they were spooked into
announcing a unilateral ceasefire under which they pledged only to
return fire. Since then, however, Turkish soldiers and the PKK have
continued to clash, with deaths on both sides. The soldiers’ funerals
are given blanket coverage on the news bulletins every night, complete
with close-ups of devastated widows and orphans. It all reinforces
Erdoğan’s electoral message: sans moi, le deluge.
The recent violence reached new heights with the suicide bombs
that ripped through the Ankara peace march of 10 October. The
government had taken few measures to protect the marchers; what security
personnel were on hand contented themselves with teargassing the
survivors. Since then it has emerged that the families of the two men
accused of the Ankara bombing (one of whom was the brother of the Suruç
bomber) had alerted the authorities to the fact that their relatives had
joined Isis. Despite being officially pursued by police, the bombers
were able to travel hundreds of kilometres to Ankara before breakfasting
in a cafe and going by taxi to the station.
Responding to Demirtaş’s charge that the government had abetted the
Ankara bombers, Erdoğan has blamed the carnage on a combination of PKK,
Isis and Syrian government agents, a coalition so laughably implausible
as to suggest that he wants to humiliate the bereaved. By implicating
the PKK, the president also hopes to deny the Kurds the moral high
ground before an election that will have a crucial bearing on the
country’s future – and his own.
The polls suggest that the HDP vote will hold up in spite of the
violence and intimidation, and that the party will clear the 10%
threshold required for parliamentary representation. That would mean
another hung parliament. If that happens, it is hard to see how Erdoğan –
short of mounting a civilian coup – could prevent the formation of a
coalition that would signify the end of his unchallenged dominance of
public life, and probably revive a peace process between Turkey and the
PKK that, for all its imperfections, offers all sides the best chance of
a decent future.
* * *
At sundown on 20 October, Selahattin Demirtaş was
sitting at one end of a crowded meeting hall belonging to one of
Istanbul’s associations of Alevis, while his host made a speech in
welcome. He stared out at the cameramen and reporters, and behind them
at the long tables, at which several hundred Alevis were also seated,
preparing to break their fast.
Campaigning before the June election Demirtaş had been full of
mischief, needling Erdoğan, making fun of the AKP’s gaffes. In one
speech he brought the house down when he introduced his party’s Armenian
candidate, Garo Paylan, as “pardon my French”.
In the Alevi association, in this subdued but defiant campaign,
Demirtaş looked past the cameras, his gaze static and distant, and
seemed not to be there. He had spent much of the previous 10 days
travelling around the country, attending the funerals of victims of the
Ankara bombing. He repeated his allegations of government involvement in
the bombing.
So many tears, so much anger; in the atmosphere of hatred and
recrimination that has descended over Turkey, others in his position
might have contemplated retreat from a struggle that will almost
inevitably lead to more deaths, including perhaps his own. (Demirtaş has
received several death threats). But Demirtaş is now more than another
replaceable figure in Turkish politics, and his choices are no longer
his alone. “From the day I was elected an MP,” he once remarked, “I
don’t recall single day of happiness.”
I had been with Demirtaş on his rounds since the morning, as he went
from meeting to meeting, mouthing the same words of defiance, calling on
his devastated supporters to stand firm.
Now he rose to address the Alevis. “Don’t succumb to hopelessness,”
he said. “Don’t say, ‘Nothing will change.’” But when the smile came, it
was heavy with pain and exhaustion.
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It
was the mourning month of Muharram, when the Alevis fast in memory of
the martyred Imam Hussein, grandson of the prophet Muhammad, whom the
Alevis and orthodox Shia revere. After his speech Demirtaş moved to a
seat at one of the tables to receive his tray of vegetables with a
little meat and yoghurt.
Many Sunnis regard the Alevis as infidels and believe that to share
their food is to be defiled. It would be unthinkable for an AKP grandee
to do such a thing – Erdoğan, for example, has not concealed his
contempt for the Alevis in the past.
Demirtaş, like Erdoğan, is a Sunni, but he was there to share the
Alevis’ food, and dispel that old prejudice. Eating his beans, listening
attentively to the man next to him, smiling for the smartphones, the
mission went on. • Support for this article was provided by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.
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