海角大神

海角大神 / Text

An earthquake unearths Turkey鈥檚 democratic roots

The February temblor pushes residents to renew their civic engagement in order to rebuild, challenging an autocrat鈥檚 rule.

By the Monitor's Editorial Board

For two decades, Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an has ruled Turkey with an autocrat鈥檚 toolbox. Now, three weeks before a potentially pivotal election, Mr. Erdo臒an is trailing in the polls. If he loses, it won鈥檛 be to a personal opponent so much as to an ideal.

That is because the powerful earthquakes that devastated cities and towns across southern Turkey and parts of neighboring Syria in February altered more than the physical landscape. They exposed the weaknesses of a state built on corruption, patronage, and intimidation, and have renewed the people鈥檚 faith in the moral strength of their communities and their own agency. For ordinary Turks, rebuilding their homes has become one with rebuilding their democracy.

The earthquakes 鈥渞evealed a society that is highly resistant, creative, and active,鈥 observed H眉rcan Asli Aksoy and Salim 脟evik of the Center for Applied Turkey Studies in Germany. 鈥淐ivil initiatives took the lead where the state was absent and proved more reliable and successful. These qualities, which cross-cut Turkey鈥檚 otherwise identity-based fault lines, demonstrate the country鈥檚 potential to heal its wounds.鈥

Mr. Erdo臒an was elected prime minister in 2003. His tenure has been a project in consolidating power. But that now appears to have backfired. Mr. Erdo臒an鈥檚 political strength relies in large part on the backing of the construction industry, which accounts for 40% of total fixed-capital investment. When an estimated 300,000 buildings crumbled during the earthquakes, that system literally came crashing down, exposing the government鈥檚 lax enforcement of building codes and sparking the arrests of hundreds of contractors for corruption and shoddy construction.

Two days after the earthquakes, Mr. Erdo臒an promised to rebuild the devastated regions within a year. That brought a chorus of condemnation from engineering associations, local officials, and civil society organizations, who saw in the president鈥檚 pledge further proof of reckless disregard both for sound building practices and the cultural integrity of communities that stretch back generations.

A public opinion survey conducted by the Istanbul-based Spectrum House at the end of March found that 82% of voters thought local government should be strengthened and the centralization of power in Mr. Erdo臒an鈥檚 presidential system reversed. For Anna Maria Beylunio臒lu, a political scientist who returned to help her home town of Antakya after the earthquakes, that reversal is about dignity.

鈥淲e will give a voice to the inhabitants of Antakya, so that the city can be rebuilt as before,鈥 she told French journalists in March. Roughly 80% of the ancient city had been destroyed. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if it will be heard, but it will remain as a reference point.鈥

Disasters can often bring new visions of a better future. 鈥淒emands for political change can emerge from unexpected places, and when they do, they can offer hope to millions of others,鈥 observed MIT economics professor Daron Acemoglu and Turkish investment banker Cihat Tokg枚z in a recent op-ed on the website Project Syndicate. 鈥淭hat, more than a new government, is what true change requires.鈥

Mr. Erdo臒an鈥檚 main presidential challenger in the election has pledged to restore the independence of institutions like the parliament, judiciary, and free press if elected. Regardless of the ballot鈥檚 outcome, popular demands for democratic change are already building a different Turkish future.