Sabri posted this to facebook this morning.

To my non-Turkish speaking friends.

Below is an oped I wrote for an Indian newspaper. Parts of it have been
plagiarised (not exactly) from Ozlem Onaran, whom I informed already.

Those of us who had spent some time at corporations know that plagiarism is
not only okay but also is necessary for survival and timeliness. It is the
academics who do not get it. I already informed Ozlem about what I did, so
I am quite comfortable.

Here it is.

Best,
Sabri

Chapuling in Turkey: The Turkish Uprising of May 27, 2013
T. Sabri Öncü

When the Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan called the protesters in the
streets of Istanbul plunderers (çapulcu) on June 2, he contributed a new
verb to the English language. A video clip of the resistance – entitled
“Everyday I’m Chapuling” – hit the Internet on June 4 with new lyrics
written on the pop song “Everyday I’m Shufflin”. And the new English verb
was born: to chapul. Soon after, the word moved to the French language and
found a place among such words as liberté, egalité and fraternité:
chapulité.

The international media have been covering the events of the ongoing
uprising that started on May 27 extensively. This article focuses on the
reasons behind it as well as on potential outcomes.

The Justice and Development (Adalet ve Kalkinma or AK) Party took power in
2002. A darling of Western governments and media until recently, it won
three elections in a row, getting about fifty percent of the votes in the
last election in 2011.

Now, the AK Party has more than 66 percent majority in the national
assembly, which allows them to pass any law they please; they have the
entire police force, which allows them to arrest or suppress anyone they
want; they have the entire justice system, which allows them to prosecute
whomever they like; they control the Turkish military, which allows them to
dream about regional hegemony Ottoman style. And, they control all economic
and financial institutions from the Finance Ministry to the Central Bank to
shape the economy in their own image irrespective of the needs of the
population.

The AK Party has been presented by the Western media not only as a
democratic model for the Muslim world but also as an economic model for
Europe during the ongoing Global Financial Crisis. While the austerity
based economic model of the AK Party has been nothing but a neoliberal
speculation and finance-led growth model of development familiar to
Indians, what their “Muslim democracy alla turca” means suddenly has become
clear even to the Economist, although the Economist itself introduced the
concept only two years ago with high praise.

The obvious injustice and police brutality in Gezi Park was just the last
drop in a long process of accumulation of discontent against this
authoritarian government. Through their social policies, the AK Party has
been pushing for a conservative Islamic life style threatening in
particular women and youth, criminalizing and imprisoning oppositional
groups ranging from seculars to Kurds, socialists, and trade unionists. And
through their economic policies, the AK Party has been imposing their
neoliberal agenda by increasingly commercializing public services, creating
areas of rent for large corporations, and eroding the living standards and
security of a significant part of the working people.

Their growth model depends on cheap labor, and speculative financial
capital inflows and a high trade deficit. The share of industrial
production is decreasing and becoming increasingly more dependent on the
imports of intermediate and capital goods as well as energy. The
agricultural production is about to go extinct and even the well-liked
Turkish kebabs are now grilled with imported meat from such far away places
as Argentina.

The AK Party economic miracle of the past decade has risen on two pillars.
First, pumping consumption through excessive credit. Second, rent
extraction through privatization of the commons from land to public
enterprises and natural resources. Neither of these strategies is
sustainable and the unemployment rate is above 20 percent among the youth.

Further, not only the households are in debt up to their throat but also
the corporate sector. Although the AK Party takes pride in having paid the
last installment of its debt to the IMF, Turkey has borrowed increasingly
more in the international financial markets during their reign, shifting
the foreign debt burden from the public to the private sector. The foreign
debt of the private sector has reached such unforeseen levels that Turkish
corporations are now vulnerable to currency shocks that may lead to
collective bankruptcies.

Although the Western media present the Turkish Uprising of May 27 only as a
rebellion against lack of democracy, nothing can be farther from truth. No
doubt this is a rebellion against lack of democracy, voice and
representation. But it is also a rebellion against rising inequality,
unemployment and the private provision of basic needs as well as against
the energy, ecological and food crises and the climate change.

The people in the streets come from many walks of life, age groups –
although the youth are on the frontlines –, religions and ethnicities, and
ideologies. There are anarchists in the streets, socialists, ecologists,
nationalists, Kemalists, apolitical folks and even some voters of the AK
Party. Although the labor joined the protests with two strikes – the
Confederation of Public Workers’ Union Strike of June 4 and 5, and the
Confederation of Revolutionary Workers’ Unions Strike of June 5 –, there is
no massive participation of the Kurdish movement yet.

So, what can be the outcome of the uprising of such diversity with no set
of concrete demands?

Perhaps Roger Walters of Pink Floyd in a letter to the protesters in
Istanbul answered the question best.

“Your great country stands at the gateway between east and west.
Constantinople is legend in the history of civilization. Your resistance
today may well be a turning point between all of us and a return to the
dark ages.”

Let us hope so.

On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 2:25 PM, Julio Huato <[email protected]> wrote:

> Where's Sabri Oncu to explain Turkey for us?
> _______________________________________________
> pen-l mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l
>



-- 
Cheers,

Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
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