After last
night, I have to write something about this election. I am no political
analyst, but it’s hard to know what to analyze anyway. The majority of the
media is in the government’s hands now—including the channels that report
election results--and most of the major foreign press agencies take their news
right from them anyway. (I did learn that the lira rose a bit, with everyone
praising “stability”. Money is amoral.)
But let me
say this. The official national election board, the YSK, said that the final
election results would not be released for another two weeks. Their website,
where we followed the results rather easily on June 7th, was shut
down most of last night. Add to that the idea that the AK Party, within a few
months, supposedly raised their percentage of the votes from 40 to 50—mainly
through the leaking of votes to them from all the opposition parties. Never
mind that most of the opposition parties are diametrically opposed to the AK
Party. More importantly, they are all radically different from one another. So
how could similar conditions cause the green, leftist, minority HDP party to
give votes to the AKP and the borderline fascist nationalist, right wing
religious MHP to do the same? And of course, reports of fraud and vote meddling
pour in on Twitter and other social media sites. Sour grapes? Maybe a little.
I’d like to
explain at least what I personally saw and experienced.
Yesterday
morning I showed up around 6:30 in the morning at a school near our house, the
election precinct where my wife would be working. I could not do anything official, of course,
but I could at least provide moral support and run errands, fetching water and
what not. Our ballot box was manned by a ballot committee made up of four
women. There were two from the CHP (Republican People’s Party), one from the
ruling AK party and one from the election monitoring organization Oy ve Ötesi
(The Vote and Beyond). There was also a civil servant, himself from the AK
Party and another guy that just showed up out of nowhere, neither election
observer nor member of the ballot committee.
He took every opportunity to help count ballots, move envelopes, arrange
the ballot box and in short, touch the official papers as much as possible. I
am pretty sure that this is illegal, but no one heeded the objections. I didn’t
catch him doing anything shady, however.
The little irregularities.
During the day, I personally heard at least two people take
pictures of their ballots while in the ballot booth. This is a common tactic. You
take a picture and send it to the AKP who then pays you for your vote. They
were warned and the incidents were entered in the minutes, but there was little
else to be done. The votes stood. And
this was DESPITE the fact that their cellphones had been confiscated, which
means they had a second phone hidden away to do the job. I am pretty sure two
more men did the same thing, though we didn’t hear the camera click. One of
them came in with his arm around the other, shouting rather loudly, “You know
who to vote for! You know what to do!” and then for good measure, walked him to
the voting booth and whispered something in his ear. When he was warned by the
committee that no attempt at persuasion was allowed and commanded to step away
from the booth, he told them it was okay because, “I am a committee chairman
here.” My impression, from the way they were acting, was that the two men had
just met.
Another man brought in his Down’s Syndrome daughter.
Technically, she gets to vote on her own, but the father insisted she needed
his help and raised such a fuss, shouting and threatening the committee, which
in turn set his daughter screaming too, that he bullied his way into the voting
booth at her side. Two votes for him.
At about three o’clock, the hallways filled with groups of
young men roaming randomly. I caught them in the bathroom smoking and writing
tweets—Aktrolls? I wasn’t sure, but then three of them showed up in our ballot
box around 15 minutes till the closing of the vote. “We are observers,” they
said grinning, arms around each other. “We’re going to make sure everything
goes like it should.” When the committee chairperson asked for their cards,
they showed her IDs for the AKP. One of them wouldn’t show her anything, and
they left. In the meantime four men from the AKP came in to monitor the vote
count—this brought the total AKP representation to seven people to every other
party’s one.
The little guy who had been there illegally touching things
since the morning took it upon himself to open the ballot envelopes. He wanted
“to help”. As the ballots were counted, another little man in a purple tie
suddenly muscled his way into the room, shouting and gesticulating wildly at
the committee chairperson.
“You will pay for this insult,” he said, slamming his fist
down on the ballot boxes. “You don’t know who you’re dealing with.”
The chairperson kept her cool. “I’m sorry sir, but what is
your complaint?”
“You’re saying the AKP.”
“Yes?”
“You are insulting our president and his party!”
“I’m sorry?”
“You will call it the Justice and Democracy Party! You will
not use an acronym! Maybe you do that with your friends on the streets but not
here! You’ll pay for that insult! Don’t you know who you are dealing with? I’ll
make you pay!”
Please keep in mind that this is in a country where a 13
year old was recently sentences to prison for “insulting” the president. In any
case, no one could understand what he was going on about. But I had read in the
HDP’s election instructions that one tactic of the AKP was to start fights
around ballot counting time, provoking representatives of the opposition into
doing something that would get them thrown out. And indeed, he almost
succeeded. The woman who represented the CHP almost charged him and had to be
held back. He’d asked her if she and her mother, who was sitting in the room as
well, would enjoy being called the “Party of the Idiots.” He came in twice and
tried the same thing. Security was called but did not come. The lawyers were
called and laughed at the man’s complaint, but no one could get him out. The
AKP man sitting next to me finally winked at him and said, “We have this room
taken care of brother, don’t worry.”
Around six o’clock when our ballot box was only half way
counted, the groups of young men outside began shouting victory slogans for the
AKP. They paraded the parking lot in their cars and honked horns flashing hand
signs and chanting the President’s name. Soon after, the government controlled
news agencies—which are the only agencies we have these days—began announcing
results. Startling, incredible victories for the AKP! Almost immediately,
several observers from the opposition parties left—though the votes had not
been fully counted! Almost no monitors for the last of the process.
I helped my wife gather the minutes from the ballot boxes.
At 9:30, they were still not all in. One extra vote popping up here, one
disappearing there—a normal thing when you dealing with all this counting probably.
The ballots were all put in a sack to be taken to the
central committee. Technically, each ballot box was accompanied by the
committee chairman for that box and two other representatives from different
parties. The last two ballot boxes were on their way out the door and we asked all
the non AKP party members who was going to accompany the ballots. Oy ve Ötesi
was gone. A woman with the CHP said that she was sure someone from her party
was going, but that she couldn’t. When we asked around, we discovered that no
one was going. They all thought someone else would do it. Everyone was moping
over the terrible loss though the votes had not all been counted by a long
shot—and so they were leaving the last of the ballots to a vanload of over 10
AKP women! This was another tactic the HDP’s election brochure warned
about—early announcements of victory to demoralize you and cause you NOT to
follow the vote count or the safe delivery of the ballots. And it worked. Not
one CHP from our school rode with those ballots. We ended up riding along by
default, promising the CHP woman to keep an eye on things.
The police drove. Remember all security forces are firmly in
the hands of the president personally. Instead of going down the road next to
the school which took you on a straight shot to the election center, they took
a round about route that wound us past the president’s house and got us stuck
in a crowd of hysterical young men waving AKP flags from their cars. Almost
certainly on purpose—this circuitous route. I couldn’t help but marvel at the
malleability of young men. All these boys cheering this wealthy autocrat—and why?
What for? They are so easily militarized and fanaticized. What the fuck is
wrong with my gender?
At election central, where the ballots are handed over to
officials—we accompanied a group of five AKP women. When they turned in the bag
full of votes, they formed a barrier with their bodies around the table that my
wife tried to muscle her way through—but one of them literally blocked her with
her shoulder. I don’t know if anything shady went on here, either, but the man
they gave the ballot minutes to pointed out that none of them had been signed
and then said something about one of the numbers being wrong. He pointed to the
tally sheet and said, “You have to follow this!” and then wrote over one of the
numbers on the minutes. The AKP ladies did not object.
And then we went to the HDP office and watched Selahattin
Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ deliver the party’s official stance on the results.
Essentially, things would be investigated and an official report released, but
it looked like they were accepting the results for now. Both did emphasize that
this was a victory for the HDP.
Why?
Why?
Over 190 HDP offices and Kurdish business had been attacked
by mobs, in some cases burned down. Dozens of party officials had been arrested
in weekly “antiterror” operations. The media had been seized by the government
and all its organs devoted to a smear campaign against the HDP (the latest
slander, for example, being that American intelligence was behind the HDP’s
campaign—what campaign?—an accusation which even awoke our embassy from its
slumber and inspired a very angry retort deploring the ‘despicable lies’).
Finally, two massacres, most likely with some official collusion, had killed
over 100 of our people and terrified the whole nation. Campaigns and meetings
were canceled out of concern for the safety of the attendees. And finally, the
ongoing war in the Southeast. On election day, many Kurdish villages were unable to vote at all. Gendarmes blocked the roads and told them they couldn't leave because there was an "operation." In spite of all of this, the HDP crossed the 10%
threshold and made it into parliament.
I have seen a few Westerners express a hope that this
election will spell an end to the “polarization” of the last few months. I take
issue with that word. Polarization implies two equally uncompromising sides. It
implies that if they would just sit down at a table and try to understand one
another’s position, they might realize how unreasonable they’re being and how
compromise will save the day. I don’t think you can use this word when one side
is so much more powerful than the other. When they use that power to
deliberately radicalize their followers, because they know that makes them more
powerful. When they allow the murder of their own citizens to achieve political
aims. When they hire the mobs and arm
them and lead them to the kill. When those mobs are so willing to do the job.
Among ordinary citizens maybe it’s polarization, but those
gangs of boys stick in my mind—wave after wave last night roaming the streets
of Üsküdar.
3 comments:
I'll never again complain about the old ladies who who volunteer at U.S polling places and who invariably take forever to find my name and address, and who snap at me if I make the least misstep while voting. Feeling grateful today about voting tomorrow.
I just found your blog here, Wonderful!! I am an American woman in California married to a Turk. I lived in Anadolu Hisar in 1982. You are very gifted in your prose and photography, I feel like I am there. I visit every few years. I am certainly going to look for ideas for things I have not done when I go next year. The Ayvalik post made me realize, been there 4 times need to get to Son Vapur for meze. Thank you again
Your welcome Vanessa--I still dream about Son Vapur!
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