Turks see Erdogan's pious hand behind alcohol sales ban during lockdown
Send a link to a friend
[April 29, 2021]
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - The Turkish
government's decision to ban alcohol sales during a 17-day COVID-19
lockdown that starts on Thursday has angered some secular Turks who see
it as President Tayyip Erdogan's latest imposition of a religious
lifestyle on all of society.
Erdogan announced the lockdown on Monday, saying schools and most shops
would be closed and people would be required to mostly stay at home in
order to curb a surge in infections and deaths.
On Tuesday, his Islamist-rooted AK Party government announced that
alcohol sales would also be banned until May 17, prompting secular Turks
to rush to stock up drinks cabinets before the measures come into force
late on Thursday.
The government said the ban was intended to avoid giving supermarkets,
which will be allowed to stay open for food shopping, a monopoly on
alcohol sales to the detriment of smaller shops, which will be forced to
close.
But that explanation did not convince all Turks, with some saying the
ban had nothing to do with fighting the pandemic and pointing out that
one of the exemptions from lockdown covered people praying at mosques.
"I don't think this has to do with coronavirus. I believe the government
thought 'let's ban it from now so that people slowly get used to it',"
said Adem Gulen, a recent graduate in Istanbul.
Speaking in a televised interview on Wednesday, Interior Minister
Suleyman Soylu dismissed the idea that by banning alcohol sales the
government aimed to limit citizens' choices, pointing to other pandemic
measures such as travel restrictions.
'INTERVENTION IN PRIVATE LIVES'
An interior ministry official said liquor shops were not essential, and
the ban avoids unfair competition and was not motivated by religion.
[to top of second column]
|
Customers shop for alcoholic beverages at a supermarket ahead of a
nationwide "full closure" amid the spread of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19), in Istanbul, Turkey April 28, 2021. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
"This has nothing to do with Ramadan," the official said of the
Islamic holy month that ends when the lockdown ends. "People have
already bought more than enough (alcohol) in the past few days."
Turks have taken to social media to air frustration and the move was
criticised by opposition politicians who said a government notice
could not erase a constitutional right.
Since the sales ban was announced, people queued outside liquor
stores while at some supermarkets beer and wine shelves have been
left empty.
"It interferes with the secular lifestyle, and is an intervention in
the food and drink culture," said Ozgur Aybas, head of a liquor
store association.
"Of course our problem is not alcohol. It is the intervention in our
private lives," he said.
The majority of Turks are observant Muslims. Secular Turks, who tend
to oppose Erdogan's AK Party, have complained in recent years that
his increasingly religious agenda has encroached on their lifestyle.
The president, who has ruled Turkey for 18 years, regularly says he
wants to raise a pious generation and has in the past called on
citizens to have at least three children.
South Africa banned alcohol sales for two limited periods since the
start of the pandemic, arguing that hospitals at risk of being
overwhelmed by COVID patients should not also have to deal with
people coming in for alcohol-related reasons.
(Reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen, editing by Jonathan Spicer and
Estelle Shirbon)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |