The pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) has played a deciding role in a number of recent elections. In the local elections of March 2019, it lived up to its kingmaker reputation by using a tactic that led to major losses for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) across the country.
The HDP had not put up its own candidates in a number of cities but had instead called on its voters to give the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) their support. It worked, and the CHP won several municipalities that it would never have won otherwise.
But this tactic has somewhat backfired against the HDP. In the past week alone, 17 HDP politicians have been arrested in another major crackdown. The Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office in Ankara cited the 2014 conflicts in and around Kobani in northern Syria as justification for the arrests.
Kobani protests seen as an excuse
When Kobani was besieged by the so-called Islamic State (IS), a number of Kurdish groups – including the HDP – called for protests and demanded that the Turkish government act more consistently against IS. In several towns in southern Anatolia, there were outbreaks of violence and dozens were killed. Now, state prosecutors are saying that the arrests are in response to “the murders, attempted murders and plundering.”
Ayhan Bilgen, mayor of Kars, is one of the HDP politicians arrested last week
Political and legal experts with whom DW spoke rejected these arguments, saying that the arrests were simply another way of removing unpopular opponents. “What proof suddenly turned up overnight so that 82 people could be arrested,” said Figen Calikusu, a lawyer from the CHP, adding that the arrests had not taken place “within the framework of the standard investigation and prosecution procedures.”
“It seems that the Kobani incidents are being used as an instrument to torpedo the political positions of the Kurdish movement, the HDP and their allies,” agreed political scientist Burak Bilgehan Oezpek.
Sabotage of the opposition
Since the ruling party’s election losses in March 2019, the Turkish government has continuously increased the pressure on the pro-Kurdish HDP. The mayors of most of the 65 municipalities that the party won have been removed and replaced by state-appointed officials. Now, the HDP only controls six small municipalities.
Many sacked officials have been in detention for months, accused of being linked to the terrorist PKK. The party’s joint leaders, Selahattin Demirtas and Figen Yueksekdag, have been in jail since 2016 despite a lack of evidence.
Baskin Oran, a political scientist at the University of Ankara, argues that the wave of arrests is an attempt to divide the opposition. “The regime has decided to unearth some old cases to sabotage all unity.”
The former co-chair of the HDP, Selahattin Demirtas, has been in prison for 4 years
Whereas in the past, Turkey’s opposition was split along ideological lines, it has joined forces against Erdogan’s government and this was particularly clear last year. Islamists, nationalists, social democrats and left-wing liberals united against the “common enemy” for the first time.
A united opposition poses the greatest challenge to Erdogan’s power, along with the global economic crisis.
The government’s strategy, according to a number of experts, is to put off voters. The opposition bloc includes the ultranationalist Good Party (IYI) and the republican CHP. Supporters of both parties could be unwilling to get behind policies which were perceived to be too pro-Kurdish and would not support any cooperation with the HDP, if it were branded “terrorist” by the government.
Slap of democracy
So far the strategy does not seem to be working. CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu showed his solidarity for the HDP this week, criticizing the wave of arrests and also highlighting the good cooperation with the IYI. “Nobody can destroy our alliance,” he said in a speech to parliament. “We will always have a good relationship.”
He also showed belligerent optimism about winning the presidential elections, which are due in 2023 but could be brought forward. “The ballot boxes will determine the outcome of this game in our favor,” he said, adding that – like in the local elections – the government would receive “democracy’s slap in the face.”
“Next time, we’re sending them away!”
Source: DW