Turkey's Erdogan stages mass rally in
show of strength after coup attempt
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[August 08, 2016]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Nick Tattersall
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - President Tayyip
Erdogan told a rally of more than one million people on Sunday that
July's failed coup would be a milestone in building a stronger Turkey,
defying Western criticism of mass purges and vowing to destroy those
behind the putsch.
The "Democracy and Martyrs' Rally" at the Yenikapi parade ground, built
into the sea on the southern edge of Istanbul, was a show of strength by
Erdogan, who has been angered by European criticism of his combative
response to the coup and by U.S. reluctance to hand over the man he
accuses of masterminding it.
Banners in a sea of red Turkish flags read "You are a gift from God,
Erdogan" and "Order us to die and we will do it". It was the first time
in decades that opposition leaders joined a rally in support of the
government, with pockets of secularists, nationalists and others
alongside his core Islamist supporters.
"That night, our enemies who were rubbing their hands in anticipation of
Turkey's downfall woke up the next morning to the grief that things
would be more difficult from now on," Erdogan said of the July 15
abortive coup, drawing parallels to times past when Turkey was occupied
by foreign forces.
"From now on, we will examine very carefully who we have under us. We
will see who we have in the military, who we have in the judiciary, and
throw the others out of the door."
The parade ground, built to hold more than a million people, was
overflowing, with the streets of surrounding neighborhoods clogged by
crowds. One presidency official put the numbers at around five million
and the event was broadcast live on public screens at smaller rallies
across Turkey's 81 provinces.
Since the coup bid, Turkish authorities have suspended, detained or
placed under investigation tens of thousands of people, including
soldiers, police, judges, journalists, medics and civil servants,
prompting concern among Western allies that Erdogan is using the events
to tighten his grip on power.
Erdogan vowed to rid Turkey of the network of U.S.-based cleric
Fethullah Gulen, whose followers in the security forces, judiciary and
civil service he accuses of orchestrating the attempted power grab and
of plotting to overthrow the state.
Erdogan said he would approve the restoration of the death penalty if
parliament voted for it, a move which would sink any hopes of European
Union membership. Shrugging off EU concerns, he said much of the rest of
the world had capital punishment.
Gulen - an ally of Erdogan in the early years after his Islamist-rooted
AK Party took power in 2002 - has denied any involvement in the coup,
which came at a critical time for a NATO "frontline" state facing
Islamist militant attacks from across the border in Syria and an
insurgency by Kurdish rebels.
In a rare appearance at a public rally, military chief Hulusi Akar said
the "traitors" behind the plot would be punished and he thanked
civilians for their role in putting it down. Many of the more than 240
people killed on July 15 were civilians who tried to prevent the
takeover of power.
The leader of the main secularist opposition, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, said a
"new door of compromise" had been opened and that politics must be kept
out of the mosques, courthouses and barracks. "There is a new Turkey
after July 15," he said.
"FREEDOM OR DEATH"
Erdogan, a polarizing figure seen by opponents as intolerant of dissent,
invited the heads of the secularist and nationalist opposition parties
to address the crowds in a display of national unity in defiance of
Western criticism.
"We're here to show that these flags won't come down, the call to prayer
won't be silenced and our country won't be divided," said Haci Mehmet
Haliloglu, 46, a civil servant who traveled from the Black Sea town of
Ordu for the rally.
"This is something way beyond politics, this is either our freedom or
death," he said, a large Turkish flag over his shoulder and a matching
baseball cap on his head.
Turkey's top Muslim cleric and chief rabbi also attended. But the
pro-Kurdish HDP, the third-largest party in parliament, was not invited
due to its alleged links to Kurdish militants, prompting anger on social
media from its supporters.
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People wave Turkey's national flags during the Democracy and Martyrs
Rally, organized by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and supported
by ruling AK Party (AKP), oppositions Republican People's Party
(CHP) and Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), to protest against last
month's failed military coup attempt, in Istanbul, Turkey, August 7,
2016. REUTERS/Osman Orsal
The brutality of July 15, in which rogue soldiers commandeered
fighter jets, helicopters and tanks, shocked a nation that last saw
a violent military power grab in 1980. Even Erdogan's opponents saw
his leadership as preferable to a successful coup renewing the cycle
of military interventions that dogged Turkey in the second half of
the 20th century.
"Erdogan has been brutal and unfair to us in the past, but I believe
he has now understood the real importance of the republic's values,"
said Ilhan Girit, 44, a musician and CHP supporter, carrying a flag
of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern secular republic.
A convoy of nationalists on motorbikes passed as he spoke.
Such solidarity may not last. There are already opposition concerns
that the restructuring of the military lacks parliamentary oversight
and is going too far, with thousands of soldiers discharged,
including around 40 percent of generals.
WESTERN CRITICISM
The extent of the purges in Turkey, which has NATO's second largest
armed forces and aspires to membership of the European Union, has
drawn criticism in the West.
In comments published on Sunday, the leader of Germany's liberal
Free Democrats said he saw parallels between Erdogan's behavior and
the aftermath of the Reichstag fire in 1933, portrayed by the Nazis
as a Communist plot against the government and used by Adolf Hitler
to justify massively curtailing civil liberties.
Turkish officials have angrily rejected suggestions that the purges
are out of proportion, accusing Western critics of failing to grasp
the magnitude of the threat to the Turkish state and of being more
concerned about the rights of coup plotters than the brutality of
the events themselves.
Amid the cooling of ties with the West, Erdogan is due to meet
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday in St Petersburg for
talks intended to end a period of tension after Turkey downed a
Russian fighter jet near the Syrian border last November.
"At the talks with my friend Vladimir, I believe, a new page in
bilateral relations will be opened. Our countries have a lot to do
together," Erdogan told the TASS news agency in an interview
published on Sunday.
In Washington on Sunday several hundred people clad in red and
waving Turkish flags gathered in front of the White House in support
of Erdogan and to demand that U.S. President Barack Obama deport
Gulen to Turkey.
"He (Erdogan) has made some mistakes but he is not a dictator," said
Okan Sakar, 35, a Turkish tax inspector currently studying in the
United States.
(Additional reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu in Istanbul, Caroline Copley
in Berlin, Maria Kiselyova in Moscow, Jason Lange in Washington;
Writing by Nick Tattersall; Editing by Ralph Boulton and Gareth
Jones)
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