Nazlan Ertan:  Turkish students continue protests despite arrests, Erdogan’s accusations

Turkey maybe staring at a winter of mass protests, as large and diverse interest groups are rebelling against economic mismanagement and cronyism.  Students and most of the faculty at Istanbul’s prestigious Bosporus University persisted in their protests, after Erdogan sacked one unpopular president to replace him with another.  Citizens losing their homes to  mandatory urban renewal, farmers in debt and even mostly pro-AKP anti-vaccine groups re staging protests across the country.

 

Lately, students have been camping in parks across Turkey since mid-September to protest the lack of public dorms or affordable rent. The protests have drawn students from the western city of Canakkale all the way to the southeastern metropolis of Diyarbakir, reports Nazlan Ertan of al Monitor.

 

The student unrest comes amid rising public discontent over the government’s perceived mismanagement of the economy and is likely to pull down the ruling Justice and Development Party’s sagging poll ratings even further. As many as 7 million youths will become eligible to vote in 2023 when presidential and parliamentary elections are due to be held in tandem. MetroPOLL, an Ankara-based polling outfit, said nearly half of the youth it surveyed disapproved of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

 

The country’s annual inflation jumped to 19.25% in August, the highest level in more than two years and higher than the central bank’s 2021 expectations. Food and non-alcoholic beverages showed the greatest year-on-year price rise at nearly 30%. Turks, particularly those in the big cities, have been complaining that skyrocketing rent is no longer sustainable. Erdogan has blamed the rise in food prices on five major market chains that wanted to maximize profits and the high rent on “greedy landlords,” and he has vowed to increase controls over both.

 

Erdogan’s reaction to the students’ complaints was to brush them off as a “vicious campaign” by those who create “another version of Gezi protests,” an allusion to the mass protests that swept the country in 2013.

 

 

“Protests by the youth have historically irked the state in Turkey,” professor Aysen Uysal, author of “Politics in the Street,” told Al-Monitor. “This government, however, has become more paranoid after young people played a key role in Gezi Park, a historical landmark that followed the Arab Spring. The students’ protests and camping in the parks show that social inequality has become a burning issue.”

 

In the early hours of Sept. 28, police detained 80 demonstrators who camped at several parks in Izmir and Istanbul following earlier, smaller operations in various other cities including Ankara and Eskisehir the previous week. In a short video, the Izmir demonstrators said they were handcuffed and maltreated by the police. They were kept for five hours and released in the morning.

 

The next day, the demonstrators carried their protests elsewhere. In Istanbul, Those Without Shelter protesters showed up at intra-city ferries with their blankets and said they’d sleep on board. In Izmir, a group who called themselves Yurtsuzlar, or Those Without Dorms, held a demonstration in front of a shuttered dorm on Sept. 29. They took aim at Erdogan’s opulent lifestyle, chanting, “We have no decent shelter while ‘others’ live extravagantly in palaces.”

 

Erdogan and his newly appointed Education Minister Muharrem Kasapoglu firmly deny that dorms are insufficient. “Our government has increased the capacity of dorms at an unprecedented level, with a million [beds],” Erdogan said at the opening ceremony of an elderly care unit in Istanbul on Sept. 26. There are 8.4 million university students in Turkey, Erdogan boasted in February 2021. “Those who are protesting are not students. You are lying. Your lives are full of lies,” the president charged.

 

A report released on Sept. 27 by the youth wing of a social democrat think tank, SODEV GENC, maintains that while the number of university students rose to 7 million in Turkey, the capacity of public dorms has declined. In the last year alone, 20 state dorms run by the Education Ministry’s Higher Education Credit and Boarding Institution were closed, making it particularly difficult for university students to find dorms when face-to-face education resumed in October.

 

According to the report, in 2018-2019, there were more than 1 million university students in Turkey’s largest city, Istanbul. The number of public dorms around the whole country was 674,672 — that is only two-thirds of the 1 million Erdogan claimed there were. In the last year, the number of beds in public dorms dropped by 426 in Istanbul, 196 in Ankara, 1,156 in Izmir and by 17,341 beds overall.

 

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“The data we have used comes from the government itself, including the 2019-2020 report of the Ministry of Education,” Selim Cankara, SODEV GENC spokesperson and a student of international relations, told Al-Monitor. “So who is lying? The students, the state data or the president?”

 

Cankara said the AKP government allowed the state-run dorms to fall apart, mainly because it wanted to direct university students to dorms run by religious communities and sects. “In the last decade, we have seen a strong rise in the number of dormitories or student houses run by religious foundations. Our report has made a conservative estimate that 17% of all dorms belong to these religious sects, but even this may be understated,” he said.

 

The student groups’ requests include turning over the dorms owned by religious groups to the Ministry of Education to be used as public dormitories, increasing the number and the quality of state dorms in general, and imposing a ceiling on rents near schools. Subsidized public dorms cost about 300 to 400 Turkish lira ($35 to $45) monthly, but going to a private dorm or renting a flat may cost five to 10 times as much. The minimal monthly salary in Turkey is $267.

 

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In many cities, including Ankara, Istanbul and Izmir, the municipalities have stepped in to aid the unsheltered. Tunc Soyer, mayor of Izmir, said the municipality had rented two buildings to provide housing for university students at subsidized rates and created a fund for students in financial need. The mayors of Istanbul and Ankara announced they were opening up municipality guest houses to students.

 

But according to the government, this is all just political posturing. “The majority of the protesters are not even students,” said Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu. “Those who are students have never applied for dorms.” Those who did were “professional provocateurs,” he told the official Anatolia News Agency. He accused them of being affiliated with various terrorist groups and the LGBT movement.

 

Like the Gezi Park protests eight years ago and the ongoing Bogazici University protests, humor has been part of the students’ toolbox and inspiration to humor magazines. “Uykusuz,” the satirical weekly, featured a familiar character who symbolizes state authority, angrily shouting at the camping students “Congratulations, you have caused the dollar to rise again.” “Leman,” another satirical magazine, issued a special “Those Without Shelter” issue in which it shows a student using the sky as an eiderdown.

 

 

 

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Published By: Atilla Yeşilada

GlobalSource Partners’ Turkey Country Analyst Atilla Yesilada is the country’s leading political analyst and commentator. He is known throughout the finance and political science world for his thorough and outspoken coverage of Turkey’s political and financial developments. In addition to his extensive writing schedule, he is often called upon to provide his political expertise on major radio and television channels. Based in Istanbul, Atilla is co-founder of the information platform Istanbul Analytics and is one of GlobalSource’s local partners in Turkey. In addition to his consulting work and speaking engagements throughout the US, Europe and the Middle East, he writes regular columns for Turkey’s leading financial websites VATAN and www.paraanaliz.com and has contributed to the financial daily Referans and the liberal daily Radikal.