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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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June 26, 2018
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U.S.
Islamists Ignore Erdogan's Authoritarianism, Celebrate Win
IPT News
June 26, 2018
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A number of
American-Islamists are hailing Turkish President Tayyip Recep Erdogan's election Monday to a new five-year term as a win for
democracy.
In truth, an autocratic leader put the inherent advantages of incumbency
on steroids, dominating media coverage, keeping opponents in jail and
generating what Amnesty International describes as a "climate of fear."
The Committee to Protect Journalists named Erdogan's Turkey "the worst jailer of
journalists in 2017." An estimated 120 journalists have been
imprisoned on terrorism charges since a failed coup in 2016. Even Amnesty
International's Turkey director Taner
Kılıç has spent the past year behind bars. Dozens more news outlets
have been shut down or taken over by elements sympathetic to the
government.
But American Islamists, who eagerly express concern for civil rights in
the United States, saw only cause for celebration in Turkey.
"Blessings to Turkey. Blessings to us all," Salah Sarsour, an
American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) national board member, wrote in an Arabic Facebook post. "...Oh God, as
we were made joyful by Erdogan's win, this Umma [Muslim nation] was made
joyful by its choice, and not its lackeys, gaining power."
AMP is a stridently anti-Israel organization that has expressed support for Hamas. Erdogan also has been a
strong Hamas supporter, calling it a national liberation movement and rejecting
terrorist designations. As a result, American Islamists stood by Erdogan
during the failed 2016 coup, and looked the other way last year when
Erdogan's bodyguards attacked peaceful protesters in Washington.
Another AMP board member, Osama Abuirshaid, also saw Turkey as the
victim of international conspiracy. "Congratulations to Turkey for its
free will, and no consolation to the Jewish and Arab Zionists, as well as
to the West which has not been cleansed of its imperialism," he wrote in an Arabic Twitter post. "We all know that
targeting #Turkey and conspiracies against it will multiply, but the
Turkish people have proved every time that they are eager for their
homeland. We ask Allah to allow Turkey to pass this stage in peace and to
remain an asset to this Umma [Muslim nation]."
Erdogan's external
opponents drew a mocking Twitter post from Hussam Ayloush, director of
the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Los Angeles office.
Ayloush has refused
to even answer whether Hamas is a terrorist group and repeatedly equated the Israeli army to ISIS terrorists.
The world rejoiced, he claimed, while "Condolences services to be
held in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Bahrain and Israel."
Ayloush's boss, CAIR Executive Director Nihad Awad, has traveled
repeatedly to Turkey and praised its "democracy and the rule of law"
in 2016.
Erdogan, who first came to power as prime minister in 2003, has
"achieved near-absolute power," the Washington Post editorialized. The prime minister's office is being
abolished and he could rule Turkey for another decade.
"What authoritarians have figured out is not to cancel elections,
as old-fashioned dictators used to do, or fake them entirely, but rather to
hold the vote and control the circumstances so tightly that no one else can
win," the editorial said. "The latest Turkish campaign was
neither free nor fair."
Erdogan received as much as 10 times more news media coverage than his
main opponent during the campaign. The Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) found opposition parties were severely disadvantaged by
Erdogan's hold over media outlets and that restrictions on free speech and
assembly were key factors in the vote.
"Erdogan 'won' reelection in Turkey this weekend only by decimating
the opposition through arrests, violence and squashing freedom of the
press," wrote
U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. "Turkey's descent into autocracy is
another reminder that democracy is under assault worldwide. DO NOT
CONGRATULATE."
Despite his advantages, Erdogan somehow was considered an underdog by
Monzer Taleb, a Kansas-based imam who once performed with a pro-Hamas singing troupe.
"Turkey have won," he wrote on Twitter, "...In spite of economic
conspiracy ... In spite of election conspiracy (sic) In spite of hate from
so called Muslim neighbors."
Erdogan's reign has been dominated by gradual moves away from the secular,
democratic reforms instituted by Kamal Ataturk after the Ottoman Empire
collapsed. Religious law has taken
root in education, the courts and in the Turkish media.
That may provide context for the praise coming this week from
conservative Houston-based cleric Yasir Qadhi. While Erdogan apparently
hasn't gone far enough, Qadhi said it was "undeniable that under his leadership,
the country overall has taken a turn for the better from the perspective of
the freedom to practice religion, and also the 'spirit' of being a Muslim.
Compare and contrast Turkey from two decades ago - a country that was known
for its militant, secularist anti-Islamic regime, and mocked and expelled a
member of parliament who dared to wear the hijab - to the Turkey of today,
and the difference is palpable."
Not a breath of concern for any of Erdogan's restrictions on free
expression and the ability to dissent was mentioned in the congratulatory
posts. Their guy won. That's all that matters.
Related Topics: Elections
/ Campaigns, Turkey,
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Amnesty
International, Taner
Kılıç, Committee
to Protect Journalists, American
Muslims for Palestine, Salah
Sarsour, Osama
Abuirshaid, Hamas,
Hussam
Ayloush, CAIR,
Yasir
Qadhi, Adam
Schiff, OSCE,
Monzer
Taleb
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