Devastation in Reyhanli (Photos from the Turkish daily, Today's Zaman) |
At least 40 people were
killed and dozens injured this afternoon when two car bombs exploded in
the Turkish town of Reyhanli, along Turkey’s southern border with Syria.
Interior Minister
Muammer Güler told private NTV channel at least 100 people were injured, 29 of
them critically.
He said the two car
bombs went off near the town’s municipality and post offices.
The blasts came shortly
after the Local Coordination Committees for Syria -- an opposition group --
reported that Damascus government forces had fired several shells toward
Reyhanli, which is in Turkey's southern province of Hatay and hosts a large
number of Syrian refugees.
Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu, speaking from Berlin, called the incident a “provocation,” saying,
“There may be some powers who want to sabotage peace in Turkey.”
In initial comments,
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, “We have recently launched a
settlement process [to address the conflict in the southeast] and those who
cannot digest this new period and the atmosphere of freedom in our country can
be involved in such attacks."
"Another sensitive
issue,” he added, “is that Hatay province is on the border with Syria, these
actions may have been taken to provoke those sensitivities.”
Erdogan said this week
that Turkey would support a U.S.-enforced no-fly zone in Syria and warned that
Damascus crossed President Barack Obama's "red line" on the use of
chemical weapons long ago.
Erdogan is due to meet
Obama in Washington in five days’ time, on May 16.
Turkey’s ruling AKP returns to its roots
Editorially, Turkey
under Erdogan is the theme of Saudi author and analyst Jamal Khashoggi’s
weekly column today for pan-Arab al-Hayat newspaper.
He penned his think piece in Arabic
after spending a few days in Ankara:
Raising his hands high in prayer, the old
traditional Turkish way of beseeching God’s guidance, Deputy Prime Minister
Bülent Arınç invited the group of Arab journalists he had addressed to recite al-Fatiha, the opening
seven verses of the Quran.
The
journalists were guests of the Prime Minister’s Press Office and Anadolu Agency
in Ankara, where they spent a few days meeting ruling party officials and the
premier’s close aides.
Arınç’s
welcoming words were fervent and emotional.
“Come
to us, we both share the same values and aspirations,” he said.
“Come
to us,” he repeated while spelling out other reasons for Arab-Turkish
cooperation. The words “Islam,” “Arab Spring” “dignity… justice… freedom” kept recurring
as well before he made an oblique reference to Egypt’s Tahrir Square by saying,
“We will all sit one day close by Tahrir Square.”
A
renowned Arab author and former editor-in-chief looked at me and said with a
smile on his face, “Does he think we’re all Muslim Brothers?”
“It’s
their heydays; brace for the upcoming,” I let slip.
I
did not see or hear members of the ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP) wax lyrical about Islamism as a form of
identity politics as much as I did during my latest Turkey visit.
I
watched their political ascent to power since Turkey’s Islamist Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan led his National Salvation Party and then Refah (Welfare) Party. The
secular authorities repeatedly closed both down.
Erbakan passed away in 2001, months before the
Islamic-leaning AKP was founded. It won the following year’s general election
by a landslide and has never looked back since, bringing Turkey unprecedented
stability, economic growth and prosperity.
Party leaders were previously cautious not to overplay
their Islamic streaks. The “Deep
State” was lying in wait for them.
Emrullah İşler, a party member of parliament who graduated
from King Saud University in Riyadh and is fluent in Arabic, told me: “Five
years ago (in mid-2008), in spite of the AKP having a parliamentary majority
and an enviable economic record, the party staved off dissolution by not more
than one Constitutional Court vote.”
İşler is confident this won’t happen again. The Old
Guards in the judiciary, the army and the security services are out. “Our
biggest achievement is to have built a democratic state,” he told me. “Each
branch of the state is committed to its charge. The army is there to defend the
nation. The judiciary is now apolitical. The government is governing. There are
no more conspiracies.”
Furthermore, the Ergenekon
trials of people long believed to have been pulling the strings of power are
underway.
I looked at an Egyptian colleague, hoping he would
have heard the conversation. What İşler said is what Egypt needs.
Turan Kışlakçı, head of the Press Office’s Arabic
department, quotes Prime Minister Erdogan as saying, “We earned the competence
– which means ‘rule’ in Turkish – five years back. Today, we’re competent.”
Is it so, or is it the Arab Spring?
Cemalettin Haşimi, a special advisor to the Prime
Minister overseeing the Office of Public Diplomacy (OPD), states clearly, “The
AKP calls for change – not only in Turkey, but the region as a whole. The preceding
Arab regimes could not have carried on. But reform and change depend on each
state’s particular circumstances.”
Haşimi is close to intellectuals and political
activists in the region and to political parties appreciative of the AKP.
He is a fervent advocate of reform changes and
believes the Arab world is Turkey’s purview and vice versa.
“Like you,” he said, “Turkey has had its Arab Spring
in 2002,” the year the AKP came to office.
“We believe in reform changes throughout the Islamic
world,” he added. “We’ve been waiting for this moment for a hundred years.
We’ve been left lagging behind for a full century. And it’s time for geography
to reconnect with history.
“We can’t accept an inequitable world order, or to
be dictated agendas or courses by the West. We need to set our own.”
Beşir Atalay, also a deputy prime
minister, was irked when an Arab researcher talked of a planned Turkish-Israeli-American
alliance, given the Israeli prime minister’s ice-breaking phone call to Erdogan,
which was brokered by Obama.
“It is sad to hear such a question.” Atalay said. “We
can’t build, under Prime Minister Erdogan, an alliance with Israel independently
of our Arab and Muslim allies.”
It seems a different and strong Turkey is heading
our way, one that has just zeroed out her debt to the International Monetary
Fund.
She believes in change in the Arab world, which she
divides into two groups – one where she feels accountable for change and
another she classifies states according to their respective economic weight and
political clout.