Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 17 hours ago
Riot police raid Turkey’s CHP opposition quarters as arrests of opposition members rise. Critics warn of democratic decline but Europe’s response remains muted amid security and geopolitical concerns.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:01These scenes have shocked many across Turkey.
00:05Riot police seem forcing their way into the headquarters of the CHP, the country's largest opposition party.
00:12They use water cannons and tear gas against the party's resisting supporters.
00:17But apart from a few tweets and statements expressing concern, Europe's response has been remarkably restrained. Why?
00:24Nacho Sanchez-Amor is the European Parliament's lead expert on Turkey.
00:30He's been tracking the country's democratic record and its long-stalled bid to join the European Union.
00:36The silence is the result of a bad assessment of the whole relation with Turkey.
00:41The level of repression is so black until clear that is not a minor signal of going backwards. It's a
00:50trend.
00:51The confrontation did not come out of nowhere.
00:53Opposition parties in Turkey have faced years of mounting pressure.
00:57A controversial court ruling in May is merely the latest flashpoint.
01:01It removed CHP leader Özgür Özel and reinstated former chairman Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who lost the 2023 presidential election to Erdogan.
01:11Critics see the decision as part of a wider crackdown on the opposition.
01:15In the past two years, hundreds of CHP politicians and officials have been arrested over alleged corruption charges, among them
01:23Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu.
01:25He was widely regarded as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's strongest challenger.
01:29But Turkey is still officially a candidate for EU membership.
01:34So what's driving Europe's silence?
01:36Part of the answer is geopolitics.
01:38Turkey has NATO's second largest military and controls access to the Black Sea, crucial in the EU's security calculations as
01:46Russia's war against Ukraine continues.
01:48Many European governments increasingly see Ankara as strategically indispensable.
01:54Turkey is a very important country for many aspects and many parts of our relations.
02:00And one of these parts is security and defence.
02:02A decade ago, European leadership was far more vocal about Turkey's democratic backsliding.
02:08But today, priorities have shifted.
02:10Energy security, migration, regional conflicts.
02:14These concerns now dominate the relationship between Brussels and Ankara.
02:18And that appears to give President Erdogan more room to manoeuvre.
02:22This is our blindness.
02:23Our blindness is requested by the Turkish.
02:26Please, let's talk about security and defence.
02:29Let's talk about pipelines.
02:30Let's talk about the cast of unions.
02:33But please, don't look to the prisons.
02:36Don't look to the civil society.
02:38Don't look to the journalists.
02:40Don't look to the LGBT people.
02:42Don't look to the universities.
02:43For many opposition supporters, the silence is felt on the ground.
02:49Europe needs to support the people in this country.
02:51We have members of parliament, mayors, students who were detained.
02:57They're throwing everyone who speaks out into jail.
03:03They are acting pragmatically, prioritising their own national interests.
03:07But we, as the Turkish people, feel like we've been left alone.
03:12President Erdogan portrays the CHP's crisis as an internal party conflict.
03:18His government rejects accusations.
03:20It is using the courts to target political opponents.
03:24And that it is moving away from democratic norms.
03:27Observers disagree.
03:29The European Union is still a club of democracies.
03:31And for that reason, we have to repeat to the Turkish authorities.
03:35If you want to really join the European Union, this is not about military power.
03:39This is not about geopolitics.
03:40This is not about trade.
03:41This is about democracy.
03:43For many here in Turkey, the concerns now go far beyond one opposition party.
03:48What will the next elections look like if the pressure continues?
03:52And will Europe find its voice again?
Comments

Recommended