Down with the dictator Erdogan - Letter from
Turkey<http://www.marxist.com/down-with-the-dictator-erdogan-letter-from-turkey.htm>
Written by Turkish activistWednesday, 05 June 2013
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/down-with-the-dictator-erdogan-letter-from-turkey/print.htm>[image:
E-mail]<http://www.marxist.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,4c6082d00aca927c7cecfcaf6efb0753b9e9fb84/tmpl,component/>

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The following letter was received on Monday from an activist in Turkey.

Hi,

We have all been in protests for 3 days. Now we are in K.. When I get home
I will write something. Just in Ankara 1500 people were arrested. 2 people
died only Ankara. I think I cannot easily describe it all. It is a very
very special process. We have talked with Alan [Woods] about the dynamics
of a secular peoples’ [movement] and the potential for it. Young people and
also the older generations of modernist people are the core elements of the
protest. Please write in your newspaper about the 'dictator Erdogan'. [The
reaction to] this process has got clearly fascist and dictatorial
characteristics. The police use gas and are shooting plastic bullets at us
but the people refuse to go home. Whenever I have time I will write you in
detail.

Best regards for all friends...

[Signature withheld]



http://www.marxist.com/down-with-erdogan-and-his-government-support-the-workers-and-youth-of-turkey-imt-statement.htm

Down with Erdogan and his government of thieves! Support the revolutionary
workers and youth! - IMT Declaration on
Turkey<http://www.marxist.com/down-with-erdogan-and-his-government-support-the-workers-and-youth-of-turkey-imt-statement.htm>
Written by Alan WoodsWednesday, 05 June 2013
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/down-with-erdogan-and-his-government-support-the-workers-and-youth-of-turkey-imt-statement/print.htm>[image:
E-mail]<http://www.marxist.com/component/option,com_mailto/link,11b7e96ce58178e3cf561b0e49d5cf830441b306/tmpl,component/>

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The magnificent movement of the workers and youth of Turkey is an
inspiration to the whole world. What began as a peaceful protest against
the cutting down of trees in a park to pave the way for the construction of
a shopping mall has turned into a tidal wave of mass protests against the
vicious and reactionary Erdogan regime, which has acquired insurrectionary
dimensions.

[image: Erdogan fears general
strike-Latuff]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/turkey/Erdogan_fears_general_strike-Latuff.gif>When
the Occupy Gezi protesters were brutally attacked by the police on 28 May
2013 and the following days, the movement rapidly turned into a nationwide
uprising against the corrupt and reactionary AKP government led by Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.

The capitalist commentators are puzzled. Turkey has had very high rates of
economic growth and was regarded as a model of stability. But this sudden
explosion shows that beneath the surface there was a ferment of discontent.

The AKP government came to power in the general election of 2002 and has
since increased its vote. Erdogan could remain in power because of Turkey’s
economic growth in the last decade. But the poor people got little benefit
from this growth. In a population of 75 million, the richest 20 percent
account for over half the national income, while the poorest 20 percent
have only 6 percent.

[image: 
201306-occupygezi]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/turkey/201306-occupygezi.jpg>An
unjust tax system puts all the burden of taxation on the workers and poor.
Inequality has soared. Trade unions are repressed and rights trampled upon.
A bottomless abyss has opened up between rich and poor, rulers and ruled.
The events in Taksim Square were only the spark that ignited a powder keg
that had been prepared for the last decade.

The rule of the AKP has been very repressive and anti-democratic. Erdogan
is arrogant and autocratic. He has brought Turkey to the brink of war with
Syria, which is very unpopular and inflicted Islamic rules that undermine
the secular character of the state.

The growth of the economy was based on a massive influx of foreign direct
investment, attracted by the privatization of public assets. But Turkey has
accumulated a massive foreign debt and growth is now almost stationary and
living standards are falling.

Despite the claim of Erdogan that the movement consists of “extremists”, it
has a very broad character. Mass demonstrations all over the country have
been joined by workers, students, pensioners, Kurds and Alevis, and even
football fans from the rival Istanbul clubs Fenerbache, Besiktas and
Galatasaray. The red flags of socialist and communist organizations can be
seen next to portraits of Ataturk, and Kurdish fly alongside Turkish
nationalist flags, which in the past would have been unthinkable.

At least two thousand have been arrested and at least 3 people have been
killed, but brutal police repression has only poured petrol on the flames.
The demonstrations have spread to at least a hundred towns and cities. The
masses are fighting back against the police and in some cases forcing them
back.

The protest movement has already has already scored a number of important
victories. It forced the police to retreat, at least temporarily in some
areas. It has forced the government into a corner. Erdogan’s violent
threats of the first days have been replaced by conciliatory noises. These
are more dangerous than the tear gas and truncheons of the police. No trust
whatsoever must be placed in these false and hypocritical
“conciliatoriness”.

All the offers of the government are lies, designed to divide and
demobilise the movement. The government says it will not build a shopping
mall in Taksim Square – only a mosque! This statement is a stupid
provocation and an insult to the people of Istanbul.

The people of Turkey are tired of having their democratic rights trampled
on by a clique that speaks in the name of Islam but whose real god is
money, whose chief mosque is the stock exchange and whose high priests are
greedy speculators. It is their interests that this government defends and
nothing else.

The government now says it “respects the right to peaceful demonstration,”
while the police, together with fascist thugs from the AKP, beat, gas and
shoot defenceless men and women on the streets and thousands are arrested
for the “crime” of demonstrating.

At this stage the main demands of the people are for democracy and social
justice. But there can be no talk of democracy as long as the government
remains in the hands of Erdogan and his gang. The first condition for a
genuinely democratic Turkey is to sweep out the corrupt gangsters in
Ankara. The main slogan must be: Down with Erdogan! Down with the
government of thieves and oppressors!

The International Marxist Tendency (IMT) expresses its complete solidarity
the revolutionary workers and youth of Turkey who are fighting courageously
for their rights. We call upon the Labour Movement everywhere to organise
protests against the brutal police repression being organised by the
Turkish government.

   - For an immediate halt to repression and the immediate release of all
   the arrested demonstrators and all political prisoners held in Turkish
   jails.
   - For the arrest and public trial of all those elements involved in
   attacks on demonstrators, not only the police officers and their AKP
   fascist auxiliaries but also the police chiefs and ministers who unleashed
   this savage repression, in the first place, Erdogan.
   - For full democratic rights, including freedom to demonstrate and the
   right of assembly.
   - For the immediate lifting of all restrictions on trade union activity
   and on political activity in the schools and universities.
   - No more censorship! The demonstrators, trade unions, workers and
   students must be guaranteed access to the mass media to put their case
   freely before the Turkish people who have been denied access to information
   and fed on a diet of lies by the government.

We agree that it is necessary to fight for every democratic demand. The
working class desires the fullest democracy in order to prepare the ground
for the struggle for socialism. But the revolutionary movement will
necessarily go beyond the formal democratic demands.

The problems facing the people of Turkey cannot be solved by merely
reshuffling ministers and governments. These problems are not just a
question of parliaments, laws and constitutions but are rooted in the class
nature of society itself.

How can there be any talk of justice when all the wealth created by the
blood, sweat and tears of the Turkish workers is expropriated by a handful
of thieves and parasites? There can never be social justice in Turkey as
long as the land is in the hands of the landlords, the banks in the hands
of the bankers and the industries in the hands of private capitalists.

Under Erdogan inequality has soared. The planned shopping mall in Taksim is
seen as a symbol of the speculative urban development, the pushing out of
working class people to the outskirts of the capital, the shoddy
construction deals going to cronies of the ruling party and the glaring
contradiction between rich and poor. It acted as a catalyst that has all
the contradictions to the surface.

The present mass movement can bring the government to its knees. But in
order to overthrow it, something more is needed than mass demonstrations on
the streets. The most powerful force in society is the working class. Not a
light bulb shines, not a telephone rings, and not a wheel turns without the
permission of the working class!

The Turkish proletariat is very strong indeed, and it has wonderful
revolutionary traditions. There have been some strikes, but what is
necessary is to call an all-out general strike to unify the movement and
provide it with a central goal. The trade unions should get together and
agree on a date. Mass meetings should be called in every factory, office
and workshop to discuss the issues and make plans.

In order to organise the powerful but dispersed forces of the revolution,
action committees should be established in every factory, college, school,
suburb and village. Draw in the broadest layers of the unorganised workers,
peasants and youth, the women, the Kurds and other oppressed layers.

The establishment of democratic action committees at every level: local,
district, regional and national, is the only guarantee that the initiative
will remain in the hands of the revolutionary people and that the Turkish
Revolution will not be hijacked as it was in Egypt.

It does not matter to the workers and peasants whether these who rob and
oppress them speak in the name of the Nation, Democracy or the Holy Quran.
The people of Egypt were robbed and oppressed by Hosni Mubarak before, and
they are robbed and oppressed by the Muslim Brotherhood now. The same
robbers and oppressors are sitting in Ankara and Cairo, or for that matter,
in Washington and London.

The repercussions of the revolutionary movement in Turkey will be felt in
both Europe and the Middle East. A mass movement against an Islamic
conservative capitalist government in Turkey can only weaken the appeal of
the Islamists in other countries and at the same time strengthen the
revolutionary movement against the Islamic governments in Tunisia and Egypt.

The root causes of the Turkish insurrection are the same as those that
sparked off the Revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia. They are an expression of
the global crisis of the capitalist system, obscene wealth alongside
terrible misery, homelessness, youth unemployment, and corrupt and
dictatorial bourgeois governments, backed by US imperialism, who trample
over the people’s rights in order to enrich their super-rich backers.

The workers of Greece, Cyprus and Turkey, the workers of Europe, Egypt and
the whole world have the same problems and are fighting the same enemy. It
is time to unite in one common international struggle of the working people
against the dictatorship of Capital, which is the main barrier in the way
of all human progress.

The courage and determination shown by ordinary people in Turkey has proved
yet again that there is a power in society that is far stronger than any
state, army, government or police force. That is the power of the masses,
once they are mobilised to fight for a change in society, no force on earth
can resist them.

The IMT stand shoulder to shoulder with the revolutionary people of Turkey:

   - Full support for the revolutionary workers and youth of Turkey!
   - Down with Erdogan and his government of thieves!
   - Form action committees to prepare an all-out general strike to bring
   down the government!
   - For a workers’ and peasants’ government!
   - Long live the Socialist Revolution!
   - Workers of the World Unite!

London, 5th June, 2013


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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