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DESCRIPTION:http://www.freeacademicians.org\n\n3/12 South San Francisco Protest Of 
 Turkey Education Privatizer Ex-AKP Turkish Family and Social Policies 
 Minister Sema Ramazanoğlu "pedophilia defender"\n"Ramazanoğlu faced 
 large-scale criticism and calls for her resignation after it was revealed 
 that 45 children staying at illegal dormitories owned by the Ensar 
 Foundation, a pro-government religious education provider, had been raped 
 by one of Ensar's teachers in Karaman."\nProtest pedophilia defender 
 Turkish “Family Affairs 
 Minister”\nhttps://www.facebook.com/SolidarityCommitteePeopleOfTurkey/\nSunday, 
 March 12 at 6 PM\nBest Western Plus Grosvenor Airport Hotel in South San 
 Francisco\n380 S Airport Blvd\nSouth San Francisco, CA 94080\n\nThe 
 Ex-Family Affairs Minister of Turkey who defended child rapes at the 
 religious government run childcare facilities by government officials is 
 coming to speak in the Bay Area. After more than 60 under...\nTurkish 
 family minister sues opposition leader 
 Kılıçdaroğlu\nhttp://www.yenisafak.com/…/turkish-family-minister-sues-opp…\nRamazanoğlu 
 seeks 50,000 TL from CHP leader for mental anguish and violating her rights 
 through insults\nEditor / Internet16:24 April 07, 2016Anadolu 
 Agency\nTurkish Family and Social Policies Minister Sema Ramazanoğlu took 
 legal action against the main opposition leader Thursday, accusing him of 
 causing her mental anguish and violating her personal rights, and seeking 
 damages of 50,000 Turkish liras.\nRamazanoğlu filed suit against 
 Republican People's Party (CHP) head Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu for comments he 
 made at yesterday's parliamentary group meeting of his party.\nKilicdaroglu 
 accused Ramazanoğlu of remaining silent on a recent student sexual abuse 
 scandal in the central Karaman province.\nRamazanoğlu's lawyers Cihat 
 Haykir and Samet Can Olgac presented a petition to the public prosecutor's 
 office arguing that Kilicdaroglu had violated Ramazanoglu's personal rights 
 by insulting her.\nThe petition accused Kilicdaroğlu of uttering words 
 beyond "moral bounds" in the remarks, saying they had been reported widely 
 and condemned by all sectors of society.\n"These sentences cannot be 
 uttered by a politician about another politician. These sentences are not 
 criticisms or declaration of opinion, but insult and humiliation… Using 
 the right to criticize requires a sense of responsibility," said the 
 petition.\n"Ramazanoğlu faced large-scale criticism and calls for her 
 resignation after it was revealed that 45 children staying at illegal 
 dormitories owned by the Ensar Foundation, a pro-government religious 
 education provider, had been raped by one of Ensar's teachers in 
 Karaman.[1] Ramazanoğlu was ridiculed for her defence of the Foundation, 
 claiming that a 'one-time occurrence of such a situation should not be used 
 to discredit Ensar's contributions to society.'[2]"\nSema Ramazanoğlu 
 (born August 25, 1959) is a Turkish politician from the Justice and 
 Development Party (AKP) who served as the Minister of Family and Social 
 Policy in the third cabinet of Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu from 24 
 November 2015 to 24 May 2016. She is the second cabinet minister of Turkey 
 to wear a headscarf, after her predecessor as Family and Social Policy 
 Minister Ayşen Gürcan. She serves as a Member of Parliament for the 
 electoral district of Denizli since being elected in the snap general 
 election on 1 November 2015.\nBefore becoming an MP and a cabinet minister, 
 Ramazanoğlu served as an advisor to former Prime Minister Recep Tayyip 
 Erdoğan from 2003 to 2009 in his capacity as AKP leader, having also been 
 one of the founders of the AKP. She has served on the party's Central 
 Executive Decision Board (MKYK). Her sister, Selma Aliye Kavaf, was also an 
 AKP Member of Parliament from 2007 to 2011 and served as a Minister of 
 State responsible for women and social policy between 2009 and 
 2011.\nRamazanoğlu faced large-scale criticism and calls for her 
 resignation after it was revealed that 45 children staying at illegal 
 dormitories owned by the Ensar Foundation, a pro-government religious 
 education provider, had been raped by one of Ensar's teachers in 
 Karaman.[1] Ramazanoğlu was ridiculed for her defence of the Foundation, 
 claiming that a 'one-time occurrence of such a situation should not be used 
 to discredit Ensar's contributions to society.'[2]\nThe Turkish Minister of 
 Family, Sema Ramazanoglu, Should Resign 
 Immediately!\nhttps://www.change.org/p/turkish-prime-minister-the-ministe…\nSema 
 Kaya Toronto, Canada\nPress Statement and Petition Text\nI am going on a 
 mother’s strike, because, although Turkey has ratified the United Nations 
 Convention on the Rights of the Child, it is being violated at the level of 
 the highest ministry office. The “Minister of Family and Social 
 Policies”, who stated that “One-time occurrence of an instance cannot 
 be a reason to smear our institute, which came into prominence with its 
 favours. We know Ensar Foundation and appreciate its favours.” cares 
 about the foundation, instead of the children! This statement has caused 
 public indignation in Turkey. Each day, we learn more about the cases of 
 child rape, some of which have taken place over the course of years, within 
 various associations and foundations. The “Minister of Family and Social 
 Policies” Sema Ramazanoğlu should resign immediately.\nFrom the very 
 first day, I have heard and approved the call made by Peoples’ Democratic 
 Party (HDP) MP, Filiz Kerestecioğlu, demanding the Minister of Family to 
 resign. Fortunately, the number of calls for resignation increase day by 
 day, besides civil demands like mine, the support and involvement of the 
 People’s Republican Party (CHP) in the parliament has also encouraged us. 
 But unfortunately, she has not resigned or has not been forced to resign 
 yet. The boycotting campaign in Turkey targeting the sponsors of the 
 foundation is gaining momentum each day. Under existing conditions in 
 Turkey, unfortunately, protesting means being beaten, being arrested, and 
 even being killed. For this reason, while millions of ordinary people like 
 me in Turkey support the call for resignation by boycotting the sponsors, I 
 want to use the right of the citizens of Turkey to protest, which has been 
 taken away from them, and support the cause from the country that I live 
 in.\nFor this reason, I am going on a mother’s strike. As a mother who is 
 a citizen of Turkey and who lives in Toronto, I want to follow the current 
 lawsuits of child molestation in Turkey while sitting sometimes in front of 
 the United Nations building and sometimes in front of the media 
 organizations, and I will collect signatures until the minister resigns. 
 So, I invite all the people in the city to sit with me in front of the CBC 
 Toronto building whenever possible, between April 4 and April 7, from 9 am 
 until 9 pm (Click here for the Facebook event page). I wish all the 
 citizens of the world who do not live in Toronto or cannot attend the event 
 support my voice and invite them to sign this petition. I will follow the 
 result of the lawsuit concerning Ensar Foundation in front of the United 
 Nations building in Ottawa on April 20, the day of the first trial. Against 
 this corrupted system dominated not by the Muslims, but by the rich under 
 the guise of religion, I consider these children my own and embrace 
 them.\nIt is enough, Artik Yeter, Edi Bese, Ya basta, ...!\nEnd Child 
 Rape!\nEnd Child Molestation!\nThe Minister of Family, Sema Ramazanoglu, 
 Should Resign Immediately!\nTurkish version:\nBasin Aciklamasi ve Imza 
 Metni\nAnne grevine yatiyorum, cunku Birlesmis Milletlerin Cocuk Haklarina 
 Dair Sozlesmesi Turkiye tarafindan imzalamis oldugu halde, en ust bakanlik 
 duzeyinde ihlal edilmektedir. “Buna bir kere rastlanmış olması 
 hizmetleri ile ön plana çıkmış bir kurumumuzu karalamak için gerekçe 
 olamaz. Biz Ensar Vakfı’nı da tanıyoruz, hizmetlerini de takdir 
 ediyoruz” diyen “Aile Bakani” cocuklari degil, vakfi dusunmektedir! 
 Bu aciklama Turkiye toplumunda infiale yol acmistir. Her gun hangi dernek 
 ve vakif altinda toplanan cocuklarin yillara yayilabilen duzende tecavuze 
 maruz birakildigini ogreniyoruz. “Aile Bakani” Sema Ramazanoglu 
 gorevinden derhal ayrilmalidir.\nIlk gunden HDP milletvekili Filiz 
 Kerestecioglu’nun “Aile Bakani Istifa” cagrisini duydum ve dogru 
 buldum. Cok sukur, istifa cagrilari her gun buyumektedir, benim gibi sivil 
 taleplerin yani sira parlemontada bulunan CHP’nin de cagriya katilimi 
 cesaretimizi artirmistir. Ama maalesef henuz istifa etmedi ya da gorevinden 
 el cektirilmedi. Ilgili vakfin sponsorlarina karsi Turkiye’de alisveris 
 boykotu her gun yayginlasmaktadir. Bugunku Turkiye kosullarinda protesto 
 hakki maalesef, dayak, tutuklama hatta olum demektir. Bu nedenle, 
 Turkiye’de benim gibi siradan milyonlar, istifa cagrisini sponsorlardan 
 alisveris boykotu yaparak yukseltirlerken, Turkiyelilerin Turkiye’de 
 ellerinden alinmis protesto haklarini, bulundugum ulkede ben kullanip 
 desteklemek istiyorum.\nBu sebeple anne grevine yatiyorum. Turkiye’deki 
 cocuk istismar davalarini Turkiyeli ve Toronto’da yasayan bir anne olarak 
 bazen United Nations binasinin, bazen medya kuruluslarinin onunden takip 
 edecek ve bakanin istifasina kadar imza toplayacagim. Bu maksatla yasadigim 
 sehirdeki herkesi 4 Nisan - 7 Nisan tarihleri arasinda 9 am’den 9 pm’e 
 kadar uygun olduklari saatlerde onunde oturacagim CBC Toronto’nun onune 
 davet ediyorum (Facebook event sayfasi icin tiklayin). Bulundugum sehirde 
 olamayan ya da gelemeyecek olan dunya vatandasi herkesin sesime guc 
 vermesini diliyor ve aşağıdaki change.org imza kampanyasına imza atmaya 
 davet ediyorum. Ensar Vakfi davasinin sonucunu davanin ilk duruşması olan 
 20 Nisan’da Ottawa’daki Birlesmis Milletler merkez binasinin onunden 
 takip edecegim. Muslumanlarin degil, din kisvesi altindaki para babalarinin 
 curumus duzenine karsi, bu cocuklari cocuklarim olarak goruyor ve 
 sahipleniyorum.\nIt is enough, Artik Yeter, Edi Bese, Ya basta, ...!\nCocuk 
 Tecavuzlerine Son!\nCocuk Istismarina Son!\nAile Bakani Sema Ramazanoglu 
 Derhal Istifa Etsin!\nThis petition will be delivered to:\n• Turkish 
 Prime Minister\nAhmet Davutoglu\n• Minister of Family and Social 
 Policies, Turkey\nSema Ramazanoglu\n\nSFLC Resolution In Support Of 
 Journalists In Turkey And Resolution Passed by TNG-CWA Local 39521/Pacific  
 Media Workers Guild\n\nSFLC Resolution IN Support Of Journalists In 
 Turkey\nhttp://sflaborcouncil.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/02-08-16TurkeyJournalistsResolution-Ltrhd.doc.pdf\nWHEREAS 
 the people have the right to be informed about the issues and events 
 affecting them; and\n\nWHEREAS journalistic freedom is essential to the 
 open flow of information on said issues and events; and\n\nWHEREAS, 
 according to the Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey 
 (DİSK), hundreds of cases of harsh treatment of Turkish and foreign 
 journalists, news outlets, websites and social media took place in Turkey 
 between July 27 and August 28, 2015; and\n\nTHEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that 
 the San Francisco Labor Council joins Turkey’s Solidarity Network Against 
 Censorship (including the Journalists Union of Turkey), Alternative Media 
 Association, DİSK’s press branch, the International Federation of 
 Journalists and the Pacific Media Workers Guild (The NewsGuild-CWA Local 
 39521) in protesting the systematic targeting and repression of journalists 
 and news media in Turkey, and in calling on the Turkish Government to halt 
 these abhorrent practices; and that the San Francisco Labor Council hereby 
 declares its solidarity with Turkey’s journalists and news media and the 
 working people whom they serve.\n\nSubmitted Richard Knee, Vice President, 
 Pacific Media Workers Guild CWA Local 39521, and adopted by the Executive 
 Committee of the San Francisco Labor Council on February 1, 2016 and the 
 Delegate Body of the San Francisco Labor Council on February 8, 
 2016.\n\nRespectfully,\n\nTim Paulson Executive Director\n\nOPEIU3 AFL-CIO 
 11\n\nConfirming resource:\n\nThousands Protest Arrest of 2 Turkish 
 Journalists on Spying 
 Charges\n\nhttp://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/28/world/europe/thousands-protest-arrest-of-2-turkish- 
 journalists-on-spying-charges.html?ref=world\n\n\n\nCWA Media Workers 
 Resolution in Support Of Journalists in Turkey\nPassed on 9/19/15 By 
 TNG-CWA Local 39521/Pacific  Media Workers Guild\n\nWhereas, the protection 
 of the rights of journalists are critical for a free exchange of 
 information and for the right of the public to be informed about all issues 
 and,\n\nWhereas according to a report titled "Refeictions of War on Press 
 in 40 Days"  by the Turkey Confederation of Progressive Trade Union of 
 Turkey (DISK) which includes violations of the law between July 27 and 
 August 28, 2015.\n\nThe report says, 2,544 people were detained, 338 people 
 were arrested, 137 people died, 130 regions of 15 provinces were declared 
 as special areas in 40 days and ‘basic rights were 
 suspended.’\n\nAttacks against journalists and the media \n\nBetween July 
 27 and August 28.\n\n* 103 websites, 23 twitter accounts were blocked. 50 
 URL were blocked with the attempt of a businessman, Ethem Sancak.\n\n* 10 
 journalists were attacked, three journalists were threatened by the 
 police.\n\n* Newspapers Evrensel and Sol were threatened by Turkish Revenge 
 Brigade (TİT). Sözcü Newspaper announced ‘they won’t be 
 silent.’\n\n* 20 journalists from Newspapers Hürriyet, Milliyet and 
 HaberTürk.\n\n21 journalists were on trial, two journalists were 
 arrested\n\n* Two British journalists were arrested.\n\n* 21 journalists 
 were put on trial since they published the images of prosecutor Mehmet Kira 
 who was kidnapped by gunmen and they were sued for imprisonment   for 157,5 
 years.\n\n* A media group was raided by policemen, and\n\nWhereas, the 
 Solidarity Network against Censorship  which includes  the Journalists' 
 Union of Turkey, DİSK’s press branch and Alternative media Association.  
 (EA/BD) said these violations and attacks should be perceived as attacks 
 against freedom of expression and press and,\n\nWhereas, the threat to 
 journalists in Turkey and their right to to their job is a danger to 
 freedom of the press and the right of all people to information about their 
 struggles and lives and,\n\nWhereas, journalists around the world face 
 growing threats to their rights and ability to do their jobs 
 and,\n\nWhereas, the CWA Media workers represents journalists and media 
 workers in Northern California and Hawaii,\n\nWhereas, the International 
 Federation of Journalists IFJ and CWA Newspaper Guild oppose these attacks 
 on the rights of journalists in Turkey,\n\nTherefore be it resolved we 
 protest the systemic targeting and repression of journalists in Turkey and 
 call on the government of Turkey to halt these attacks and this local calls 
 for solidarity with journalists in Turkey and support initiatives such as 
 the Solidarity Network Against Censorship and urge all workers, trade 
 unionists and the San Francsico Labor Council, California Federation of 
 Labor to support the rights of journalists in Turkey.\n\nWhy did Turkey's 
 regime turn to the iron 
 fist?\nhttps://socialistworker.org/2017/01/11/why-did-turkeys-regime-turn-to-the-iron-fist\nTo 
 understand the sources of state repression and violence being inflicted in 
 Turkey, John Monroe looks at the history of the ruling party and the 
 deepening crisis it faces.\n\nJanuary 11, 2017\n\nTurkey's President Recep 
 Tayyip Erdoğan attends meetings in Istanbul after the unsuccessful 
 coup\n\n"A GIFT from God." That's what Turkey's President Recep Tayyip 
 Erdoğan said of the failed coup against his government last July.\n\nIt 
 was signal that the aftermath of the botched takeover would be used as an 
 opportunity to purge former allies-turned-enemies who are accused of 
 plotting the coup. But it quickly became clear, as Erdoğan's Justice and 
 Development Party (AKP) declared a state of emergency, that he has his 
 sights set on a much broader range of opponents.\n\nThe uprising that aimed 
 to topple the government last July was concentrated in a section of the 
 military among followers of cleric Fetuhallah Gülen, the leader of the 
 Hizmet movement. The Gülenists--who advocate a different interpretation of 
 Islam to the AKP, but are similarly pro-business and socially 
 conservative--were early allies of Erdoğan's party when it first came to 
 power in 2002, but tensions grew to the breaking point, especially during 
 the last several years.\n\nBut Erdoğan's counter-coup has gone much 
 further then the Gülenists. Leaders of the left-wing People's Democratic 
 Party (HDP), including its representatives in parliament, have been 
 arrested and held, even though the HDP immediately and vocally opposed the 
 coup.\n\nThe oppressed Kurdish minority that accounts for the HDP's main 
 base of support has been especially hard hit. Dozens of mayors in Kurdish 
 towns have been removed from their positions. The Middle Eastern news 
 website Al-Monitor reported last month that an estimated 32,000 Kurds in 
 the war-torn and impoverished Southeast of the country were without food 
 support after a charity, the Samarsik Organization, was closed and its 
 board of directors arrested.\n\nThe government's operations are also 
 directed at sections of the country's power structure. More than 125,000 
 state employees have been dismissed or suspended due to alleged links to 
 the Gülenists or the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Almost 28,000 
 teachers had been suspended as of last September. Judges, police and other 
 public officials have been detained, arrested, dismissed or 
 suspended.\n\nThe repression has also hit the media. Reporters and 
 executives of the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet were arrested for having 
 alleged terrorist links, and are among a growing group of journalists 
 behind bars.\n\n- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -\n\nERDOGAN HASN'T simply 
 used the Gülenists as a pretext for repression. He is determined to wipe 
 them out.\n\nHundreds of supposed Gülenist businesses have been seized by 
 the state, while prominent businesspeople with links to the Gülen network 
 have been arrested. Gülenist educational institutions--from religious 
 instruction and standardized test tutoring to universities--have been shut 
 down or taken under state control. And Turkey has been pushing the Obama 
 administration to extradite Fethullah Gülen, who lives in self-imposed 
 exile in the U.S.\n\nAmid this repression, Erdoğan is quickly moving 
 forward with his long-held aspiration to strengthen his position as 
 president by re-writing the constitution. The AKP has formed an alliance 
 with the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) to try to push through 
 a constitutional revision that would give the office of president increased 
 powers over the judiciary and government ministries, and the ability to 
 declare states of emergency and unilateral presidential decrees, and even 
 dissolve parliament.\n\nMeanwhile, the Turkish military is embroiled in 
 conflicts in Syria and Iraq, not to mention counterinsurgency operations 
 within Turkey, and the AKP is driving regional instability to new heights 
 with its growing collaboration with Russia, the chief imperial ally of 
 Bashar al-Assad's dictatorship in Syria. The recent assassination of a 
 Russian ambassador in Ankara is one example of blowback from these 
 interventions.\n\nEconomically, the national currency, the lira, has been 
 losing strength relative to the dollar, and there is a free fall in foreign 
 direct investment, an essential component for Turkish economic growth. 
 While Erdoğan blames shadowy conspiracies for his economic woes, 
 economists and financial groups around the world aren't 
 convinced.\n\nThough the atmosphere of crisis has escalated massively, the 
 AKP's drive to repression and war is the culmination of conflicts and 
 contradictions that began to unfold after the Great Recession of 2007-08. 
 Understanding what is taking place in Turkey today--including the rupture 
 of the alliance between the AKP and the Gülenist network--requires 
 understanding the backdrop to the AKP's rise to power.\n\n- - - - - - - - - 
 - - - - - - -\n\nTHE AKP is the descendant of a long line of Islamist 
 parties that represented the interests of the rising Anatolian bourgeoisie 
 whose economic power was based in manufacturing in eastern Turkey. Allied 
 with conservative middle-class Muslim Turks, they backed a series of 
 Islamic parties led by Necmettin Erbakan, beginning with the National Order 
 Party.\n\nIslamism emerged and grew in influence in the 1960s and 1970s. 
 Working-class militancy was also on the rise as industry developed in the 
 major cities of Turkey. Even after coups in 1960 and 1971, unrest 
 continued, breaking out into violent struggles between revolutionary left 
 and fascist organizations.\n\nThis culminated in the most extreme of 
 Turkey's coups--in 1980, when hundreds of thousands of people were 
 arrested, with many tortured in prisons and disappeared, and dozens 
 officially executed. The repression was largely directed at the 
 working-class movement, while the fascists were let off lightly, when they 
 were targeted at all.\n\nThe coup regime, as a representative of the 
 powerful capitalists of western Turkey, sought to restructure the economy 
 along neoliberal lines. In order to integrate Turkey into the global 
 economy, state-owned enterprises were slated for privatization, and 
 industry was retooled for export instead of domestic consumption. The 
 regime and its elite backers also looked to membership in the European 
 Union to further the process of economic integration.\n\nErbakan's National 
 Order Party was banned in 1980, along with all the other official parties. 
 However, despite a long-time commitment to secularism, the Turkish military 
 promoted what it deemed to be moderate Islamism as an alternative to 
 revolutionary politics.\n\nWhen party politics were legalized again in 
 1983, Islamism organized as the Welfare Party (WP). Under Erbakan, the WP 
 would go on to win significant electoral victories from 1991 to 1996, 
 becoming the largest party in parliament. Erbakan himself became leader of 
 parliament. But in 1997, the military again intervened, this time 
 explicitly against the growing influence of Islamist politics, and Erbakan 
 was forced to step down.\n\nThe ruling class of Turkey was faced with a 
 political problem. Despite its commitment to neoliberalization--expressed 
 through the main manufacturing organization TÜSIAD--it hadn't found a 
 party that could build sufficient consent around the restructuring. After 
 another military intervention into politics in 1997, none of the 
 establishment parties seemed capable of mobilizing enough public support 
 for these programs.\n\nIn 2001, the AKP formed as a splinter from the new 
 Erbakan-led party, now called the Virtue Party. Led by Erdoğan and backed 
 by MÜSIAD, the manufacturing association of the Anatolian bourgeois, the 
 AKP won a major victory at the polls in 2002. Erdoğan became prime 
 minister.\n\nThe AKP renounced the explicit Islamism of Erbakan and moved 
 away from transnational Islamism and the Virtue Party's social justice 
 language. While maintaining an image of popular support through the 
 creation of social welfare program, the AKP committed itself to 
 neoliberalism--and formed an alliance with the Gülenist network to carry 
 out its program.\n\n- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -\n\nGÜLENISM EMERGED in 
 the late 1960s along with other Islamist currents as a Sufi organization 
 led by the charismatic Fethullah Gülen. He and his supporters renounced 
 the project of building an Islamic state as well as transnational Islamist 
 politics.\n\nGülen promoted a balance of science and religion, as well as 
 Turkish nationalism and integration into the market economy. The Gülen 
 network formed its own business association, TUSKON, and an extensive 
 system of schools to teach for the mandatory Turkish examinations. At their 
 height, these schools taught more than 1 million students in Turkey and 
 expanded their operations to dozens of other countries.\n\nThe Gülenists 
 operated an extensive charity network that provided essential services at a 
 time when social spending was being slashed. The Gülenists controlled 
 important media outlets that were essential to both glorifying the AKP 
 after its rise to power and criticizing the secularist state and the 
 Turkish military, not to mention other opponents. Gülen had encouraged his 
 followers to try to get important state positions even before the alliance 
 with the AKP.\n\nMÜSIAD and TUSKON greatly benefited from the post-1980 
 coup environment. Committed to the neoliberal project, their businesses 
 expanded greatly under the reorientation toward an export-based economy. 
 They shared conservative Islamist ideologies, as opposed to the secularism 
 promoted by the military and the western Turkish business class. The 
 Islamist currents likewise shared a common enemy in the military, which in 
 both 1980 and 1997 threatened their political objectives.\n\n- - - - - - - 
 - - - - - - - - -\n\nDESPITE THE misgivings of the capitalist class 
 concentrated in Western Turkey, the AKP presented itself as a political 
 party able to maintain mass support while carrying through neoliberal 
 restructuring.\n\nWith the support of the vast resources of the Gülen 
 network, the AKP built a strong base among the poor through social welfare 
 measures. State spending on welfare grew from 1.4 billion lira in 2001 to 
 24 billion in 2013. These projects were buoyed by informal Islamist charity 
 work that provided basic necessities and job opportunities, further 
 building grassroots support.\n\nBacked by both TÜSIAD and MÜSIAD, 
 Erdoğan privatized state enterprises, restructured the banking sector and 
 moved the lira into a floating exchange system. This contributed to strong 
 economic growth between 2002 and 2007, with the annual increase in gross 
 domestic product running at 7.2 percent per year during the period. Even 
 after the Great Recession struck, Turkey's economy rallied in 2010 and 
 2011.\n\nMany of the neoliberal "reforms" were dependent on the historical 
 weakness of Turkish trade unions. While the poor gained economic support 
 from the welfare programs and the Turkish population experienced increased 
 spending power in general, formal trade unions were under attack. In 2003, 
 a labor reform law was passed to promote "flexible" labor policies, and 
 further legislation has been put on the table to increase temporary 
 employment, further undermining unionization.\n\nThe AKP also won support 
 from the liberal intelligentsia. The party promised to work toward Turkey's 
 entrance into the EU, which would require not only economic but political 
 reforms. The AKP positioned itself as the party of democracy, against the 
 coup-making military and the big Western-oriented businesses that didn't 
 care about ordinary people.\n\nIn 2007, the military colluded with the 
 center-left Republican People's Party (CHP)--for decades, the dominant 
 political party before the rise of the AKP--and the far-right MHP in an 
 attempt to push the AKP out of power. This time, the attempt failed. Under 
 attack from the traditional forces of repression, Erdoğan and his party 
 were able to mobilize a counterattack.\n\nSupported by the Gülenists' 
 substantial media resources, the AKP exposed two alleged military plots: 
 ERGENEKON in 2008 and Sledgehammer in 2011.\n\nHundreds of military 
 personnel were convicted and sentenced to long prison terms. However, the 
 cases were marked by fabricated evidence, judicial malpractice and 
 political manipulation by the AKP and the Gülenist press, and many were 
 later overturned by constitutional courts.\n\nGiven the long history of 
 military coups in Turkey, many among the liberal intelligentsia and the 
 laboring classes alike supported the trials as an end to "military 
 tutelage." But like the anti-Gülen purge today, Erdoğan and his party 
 used the campaign against the military--whatever its merits or lack 
 thereof--as an opportunity to crack down on Kurdish activists, leftists and 
 other oppositionists.\n\nIn the wake of these purges of its enemies in the 
 military, the AKP helped place Gülenists within the Turkish Armed Forces. 
 Some of these operatives would later initiate the July 15 coup attempt this 
 year.\n\n- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -\n\nIN THE wake of the Great 
 Recession, the AKP began to reformulate its political project. With 
 slowdown in growth, the ruling party turned to interventionist measures to 
 get the economy moving. Property laws were rewritten to enable the state to 
 apply eminent domain over historic city buildings, which were then razed 
 and replaced by new construction.\n\nThis was carried out in force in 
 Istanbul, where an initially small protest to defend one of the last green 
 spaces to survive runaway gentrification was the spark that started the 
 2013 Gezi Park uprising. The AKP also initiated massive infrastructural 
 projects. While the work was carried out by private companies, the 
 government controlled the contracts, and AKP leaders used them to reward 
 their own supporters.\n\nThe schism between the AKP and the Gülenists 
 began to emerge over the attempt by the AKP to broker a peace deal with the 
 Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).\n\nThe PKK had been locked in a devastating 
 civil war against the Turkish state and its policies of criminalizing the 
 Kurdish identity within an ethnocentric Turkish state. After the 2007 push 
 by the military to destabilize the AKP government, Erdoğan moved toward a 
 peace process to de-escalate the war on the Kurds. This won the AKP further 
 support among a population exhausted by the years of civil war--including a 
 section of the Kurdish population that for a time abandoned traditional 
 parties to vote for the AKP.\n\nBut the AKP's overtures to the Kurds were 
 anathema to the military and Turkish nationalism, including the Gülen 
 network, which is ideologically committed to the founding state doctrine of 
 "Turkey for the Turks."\n\nGülenists leaked word of the government's 
 secret talks with the PKK. In retribution, the AKP cut the Gülenists and 
 TUSKON out of government contracts--a main source of economic stimulus in a 
 time of national and global downturn.\n\nThe conflict came to a head 
 several months after the Gezi Park protests of 2013 receded. In December of 
 that year, police, prosecutors and media outlets linked to the Gülen 
 network initiated corruption proceedings against three ministers in 
 Erdoğan's cabinet. The accusations led to renewed anti-government protests 
 that threatened to spread as the Gezi Park movement had.\n\nFor the next 
 two-and-a-half years, Erdoğan would lead a campaign against the "parallel 
 state" of the Gülenists within the Turkish government, pushing them out of 
 the police, judiciary and other state bodies. Throughout this whole 
 process--even now during the purges--the AKP has had to contend with the 
 well-known fact that it helped place these now-bitter rivals in their 
 positions of power.\n\n- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -\n\nOBVIOUSLY, THE 
 Gezi Park protests in the spring and summer of 2013 were a decisive event 
 in Turkey.\n\nThe small group of environmentalists and anti-gentrification 
 protesters who occupied the green space against the threat of another AKP 
 urban renewal project were subjected to a brutal police assault. This time, 
 the spark turned into a blaze--demonstrations spread across Istanbul, and 
 then to other cities around the country, including the heartlands of 
 support for the AKP government.\n\nThe Gezi Park movement galvanized people 
 against AKP authoritarianism and neoliberal austerity. In Istanbul, in 
 particular, it brought together young professionals, unions, left 
 organizations, Kurdish activists and Muslim minorities like the 
 Alevis.\n\nThough the nationwide uprising had receded by mid-June, the 
 spirit of Gezi Park continued to have effects in the months and years to 
 come. It drove the protests that emerged later in 2013 against AKP 
 corruption after the Gülenists initiated proceedings. Another consequence 
 was the success of the left-wing People's Democratic Party in elections in 
 2015.\n\nDrawing its main base from the Kurdish population in eastern 
 Turkey (also referred to as northwestern Kurdistan), the HDP won more 
 widespread support elsewhere in Turkey based on a progressive platform 
 around workers' rights, feminism, LGTBQ issues, and environmental and 
 social justice.\n\nIn 2014, one of its co-leaders, Selahattin Demirtaş, 
 ran for president, receiving almost 10% of the vote. But the real 
 breakthrough came in June 2015, when the HDP's bold campaign for Turkey's 
 parliament won 13.1 percent of the vote. This easily surpassed the 
 undemocratic 10 percent threshold for a political party to be represented 
 in parliament--the HDP was awarded 80 seats.\n\nThe HDP's electoral success 
 was responsible for overturning the AKP's previously strong parliamentary 
 majority. That posed a challenge to one of Erdoğan's core political 
 objectives--a constitutional revision to increase the powers of the 
 presidency.\n\nThe role of president in Turkey has been largely symbolic, 
 but Erdoğan's goal is to amend the constitution in order to consolidate 
 power in the executive branch. When the HDP did so well, the AKP was left 
 without enough members of parliament to push through the changes itself, 
 and it was unable to muster support from the other major parties, the 
 center-left CHP and far-right MHP.\n\nTo regain momentum, Erdoğan 
 abandoned the sputtering peace process. The AKP called a new election in 
 the fall, and the campaign of terror and violence begun against the HDP 
 before the June election was escalated. The savage war in Turkish Kurdistan 
 was renewed.\n\nErdoğan failed in his immediate goal of pushing the HDP's 
 vote below the 10 percent threshold to qualify for parliament, but the AKP 
 did win enough support from the other big parties--thanks to intensified 
 nationalist policies and rhetoric--to regain an outright majority in 
 parliament. After the election, HDP representatives in parliament were 
 stripped of their legal immunity, paving the way for their future 
 arrests.\n\nSince the July 15 coup attempt, the AKP has moved on multiple 
 fronts to consolidate its authoritarian regime.\n\nThe purges and mass 
 repression are designed to wipe out both its former allies, the Gülenists, 
 and the leftist opposition party, the HDP. From being seen as a peacemaker, 
 Erdoğan has made clear the government's commitment to crushing Kurdish 
 self-determination, with military assaults on the PKK and outright 
 occupations of Kurdish cities and towns throughout southeast Turkey.\n\nIn 
 general, public institutions, businesses and civic organizations are being 
 subjected to strict government control. Working-class people, women and 
 oppressed minorities are bearing the brunt of the onslaught, but the 
 Turkish people in general are living through a tide of anti-democratic 
 repression, carried out by a party that once posed as guardians of 
 democracy against the coup-makers of the military.\n\nMass mobilizations 
 like the Gezi Park uprising have given people a glimpse of what a different 
 Turkey would look like, based on an expansion of democracy and solidarity. 
 The AKP is proving that it will go to any length to try to prevent this 
 alternative from being realized.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/12/18797350.php
SUMMARY:South SF Protest Of Turkey Education Privatizer Ex-AKP Turkish Family Minister
LOCATION:Best Western Plus Grosvenor Airport Hotel in South San Francisco\n380 S 
 Airport Blvd\nSouth San Francisco, CA 94080
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2017/03/12/18797350.php
DTSTART:20170313T010000Z
DTEND:20170313T020000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
