A bloody New Year

The year 2016 has been perhaps the most unhappy and violent in Turkish recent history


Editorial January 03, 2017
Turkish special force police officers and ambulances are seen at the site of an armed attack at the Reina nightclub in Istanbul on January 1, 2017. PHOTO: AFP

With the turn of the year being celebrated around the world with jubilant fireworks and high hopes the guns were busy in Turkey and Brazil. For the former terrorism is a frequent visitor, for the latter a rarity; and what at first looked like it may be an act motivated by terror transpired to be a ‘crime of passion’ that left at least 12 dead including the shooter, his estranged wife and their 8-year-old child. Celebration turned into horror two hours into the New Year at the Reina nightclub, Istanbul, on the edge of the Bosporus. By the time the gunman left, according to Reuters news agency, by mingling with the fleeing crowd leaving his weapon behind, 39 were dead and dozens injured.

On the morning of 2nd January Reuters were also reporting that the Islamic State (IS) was claiming the massacre, a claim impossible to verify. There is no causal link between the tragedies half a world apart other than terror — in Brazil the fear that the shooting may be terror-linked, and in Turkey the reality that it was. The fear of terror is universal, touching everybody everywhere.

There were 22 terrorist attacks in Turkey in 2016 leaving at least 360 dead and more than a thousand injured. The country has become bitterly divided politically, ethnically and economically in the years in which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been in power. Mehmet Gormez, the most senior Muslim cleric in Turkey, condemned the attack as did world leaders and their foreign secretaries, a condemnation that is part of the post-attack Theatre of the Macabre, a piece of Grand Guignol played out in front of press conferences and in media statements that does nothing to either address or mitigate the underlying causes of terror whatever its nationality or origins.

For Turkey there is little hope of anything other than more of the same in 2017. Indeed for much of Europe and the Middle East the new year looks bleak, though the Russian brokered ceasefire in Syria largely appears to be holding. No such peace in Turkey. Alongside the almost 300 deaths associated with the failed coup there are the twin bombings outside a football stadium in Besiktas that killed 46 mostly police officers; the attacks on the Ataturk airport and another near the Hagia Sophia mosque — the butcher’s bill ever lengthens.

Why? Who? There has been criticism of the polarising rhetoric from conservative clerics and media outlets that have spoken of the ‘sinfulness’ of New Year’s celebrations — the attack may conceivably have been on the national secular character that has become strained under the Erdogan Presidency. Or it could have been the Kurds. Or those protesting against the Turkish engagement in the Syrian civil war. Or it could, as is claimed, have been the Islamic State or one of their innumerable and anonymous proxies. The IS may be on the retreat in terms of the physical territory it holds but as an idea, an ideal, an ideology, it continues to proliferate in dark hearts and blacker minds everywhere, the terrorist equivalent of a virus for which there is no vaccination as yet.

The year 2016 has been perhaps the most unhappy and violent in Turkish recent history. Terrorist attacks aside the insurgency in the southeast of the country shows no sign of resolution. Hopes of joining the European Union faded dramatically in the post-attempted-coup crackdowns; feeding through to a national climate of instability and uncertainty into which any number of groups, agencies, lone individuals and entities are liable to pitch a bomb, a gunman, a suicide bomber. In 2017 President Erdogan is going to seek to expand his already substantial constitutional powers, much to the dismay of the secularists who see an increase in polarities and violence as the state moves ever further to the right. In Brazil the fear of terror led to a swift mislabeling — but there was no mistake in Turkey.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 3rd, 2017.

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COMMENTS (1)

Toti calling | 7 years ago | Reply The argument for the 'sole' killer in Turkey is simple: In conservative Islam drinking and dancing of men and women is not allowed. Such attacks have taken place in Pakistan also some time ago. Before accusing a mad killer, we should ask our Mullahs if that sort of celebration is allowed and do not be surprised of what he will tell you. There is more to it than meets the eye.
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