Opinion: Erdogan fears Turkey’s Generation Z

Deutsche Welle


By Banu Güven
Feb. 5, 2021


[Protests at Istanbul's Bosphorus University against a rector
appointed by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have led to harsh
crackdowns. The president fears a second Gezi Park movement, says Banu
Güven.]

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan fears the protests that have
erupted at Istanbul's Bosphorus University (also known as Bogazici
University — Editor's note) against his totalitarian rule. He has
retaliated with an iron-fisted approach.

In the 1990s, I studied at Bosphorus University, which is situated on
the European side of the city and offers English-language teaching.
During this time, I worked as an assistant to professor Ustun Erguder,
the institution's rector at the time.

A bastion of liberalism

Bosphorus University is one of Turkey's few remaining bastions of
democratic and liberal thought. Its resilient faculty and critically
minded students are a thorn in Erdogan's side; they are the sort of
forces he wishes to purge from Turkey. The university is a safe haven
for liberals, anarchists, feminists, LGBTQI+ activists, Kurds, the
left, atheists and even — to Erdogan's horror — pious Muslims, who
fear no one except Allah.

They study and teach side-by-side at this university, on this
beautiful campus, near River Bosphorus. And they reject the new
Erdogan-appointed rector, Melih Bulu, arguing he committed plagiarism,
which disqualifies anyone from leading one of Turkey's top
universities. It has also emerged that he used to be an active member
of Erdogan's ruling AKP party and in 2009 considered running as mayor.
It is evident that Erdogan wishes to install Bulu to control this
elite institution. But that won't work.

For weeks, lecturers and students have been staging midday protests,
lining up outside with their backs to the rector's office. These days,
Bulu must be the loneliest rector in the entire world.

Hundreds of arrests

Erdogan is angered by such resistance. And by staging creative
protests and posting online videos, the students are attracting ever
more public attention. Students at other universities have already
expressed solidarity with them. Erdogan, in turn, has brought in the
police to crush such protests. Hundreds of students were temporarily
arrested; four remain in custody.

Erdogan and Devlet Bahceli, who heads Turkey's nationalist MHP junior
coalition partner, lash out against the students almost daily,
branding them "terrorists." In an effort to further delegitimize the
protests. Erdogan has even resorted to stoking homophobia, claiming
"there is no such thing as LGBT." AKP Interior Minister Suleyman
Soylu, meanwhile, called the movement "revolting."

First-time voters threat to AKP power

Erdogan is resorting to violence because he fears a movement akin to
the 2013 Gezi park protests. He is desperately trying to delegitimize
the students as he worries they could vote him out in the 2023
election. He is on to something: within two years, 5 million young
Turks will have reached voting age, comprising about 12% of the total
electorate. Only a small faction would cast their ballot for the
president — that much is clear from the thousands of dislikes and
negative comments Erdogan's 2020 YouTube live stream attracted.


Various surveys show that Turkey's Generation Z has little sympathy
for Erdogan and his ideas. According to one poll by the Gezici
Arastırma Merkezi institute conducted last year, 76.4% of respondents
said they regard the rule of law and democracy as top priorities for
Turkey. A mere 15.7% of Generation Z voters say they regularly pray —
bad news for Erdogan, who aims to make Turkey more pious. On top of it
all, a MetroPoll poll found that 55% of AKP supporters favored
university rectors to be democratically elected, rather than appointed
by the president.

How much more brutal will Erdogan get?

Bosphorus University rector Bulu insists he will not resign — which he
cannot anyway, unless Erdogan replaces him with someone else. So Bulu
hopes the protests will slowly dissipate.

Erdogan's brutal police crackdown will prevent a second Gezi park
uprising. But this violence will not change the minds of Turkey's
young. The more force the president marshals, the sooner his downfall
will come. The question is: how much more violent can Erdogan become
in years to come?

*

Banu Güven is a Turkish journalist and television presenter. She
writes for various German and Turkish media outlets. She has been
living and working in Germany since 2018.