Turkey's failed coup creating fear in Cyprus
Turkey’s failed coup
creating fear in Cyprus over Erdogan annexation
S, Herald Sun
July 25, 2016 12:00am
Subscriber only

THE question
sitting uncomfortably with Turkish Cypriots in Australia is whether the newly
emboldened Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan will annex Northern Cyprus.
I am currently on
the Turkish side of the divided island of Cyprus — where the failed military
coup in Turkey remains big news — in the old city of Famagusta, a stone’s throw
from the contested area of Varosha, a ghost city where hotels and homes have remained
uninhabited for 42 years.
My Turkish Cypriot
Australian hosts are nervous about the possible local consequences of the
events in Turkey. For the first time in modern Turkish history, the mosques
were used for political purposes. The loudspeakers atop the minarets, normally
used for calls to prayer, were blasting out messages from Erdogan to his
supporters.
This politicisation
of religion is new in Turkey and completely alien to the Turkish Cypriots. It
makes our Turkish Cypriot friends feel very uneasy. The restaurant we met in
has many young and older Turks who are socialising, with alcohol flowing freely
and not a single female wearing any kind of Islamic head gear.
That is Turkish
Cypriot culture, where Islam is practised quietly and does not dictate how
people live their lives. It is why Turkish Cypriots have so readily integrated
into Australian society.
But for how long
will an increasingly traditionalist, Islam-oriented Turkey tolerate this
liberal Turkish outpost in the Mediterranean? It’s an outpost which has a
standing Turkish army of several thousand and where Australia still has a
police contingent on the green line dividing the Turkish and Greek sectors.
Following the
failed coup, Erdogan is methodically consolidating his control of the army, the
judiciary, press, police and even the education system. This purge in the name
of “democracy” is even extending to bringing back the death penalty to silence
opponents.
The bedrock of
Erdogan’s support for such actions rests in the continuing Islamisation of
Turkey.
How long then
before he looks to remove all pockets of liberal resistance, not just in Turkey
but in Turkey’s sphere of influence? How long before he looks at Northern
Cyprus and concludes that he has an opportunity to annex it as Putin annexed
Crimea?
The justification
is simple: the talks between Greek and Turkish Cypriots have dragged on and
left Turkish Cypriots isolated from and unrecognised by the international
community.
There are fears President Erdogan is
looking to take over Northern Cyprus.
Erdogan, drawing on
Putin’s Crimean example, may be tempted to engineer a referendum in Northern
Cyprus to see if its inhabitants will join Turkey, to resolve their isolation
through annexation. It’s not as though he would not win such a referendum. Half
of the original Turkish Cypriot population have emigrated and been replaced by
mainly Anatolian Turks, from whom Erdogan draws significant support. Support
for annexation would be assured.
Any attempt at
pressure from the European Union, the US or Australia to prevent annexation
would be flicked aside. Erdogan knows his recent actions have set back any
prospect of Turkey joining the EU. Perhaps, that is what he wants. It certainly
means any leverage the EU may have had over Turkey on Cyprus is gone. The US,
reliant as it is on Turkish bases for their attacks on IS, is unlikely to offer
much argument.
These are dangerous
times. The advent of “democratically elected” authoritarian leaders should
worry us all. Putin and Erdogan claim to be democratically elected and then
demolish real democracy, which is characterised by a free press, an independent
judiciary, impartial policing, the rule of law, a liberal education, free
speech and a proper parliamentary system of accountability.
Those things are
fundamental to our democracy but to Putin and Erdogan, they are inconveniences.
As Erdogan has said: “Democracy is like a train: you ride it until it takes you
where you want to go, and then you get off.”
Before this train
completely stops, as a matter of urgency, Greek and Turkish Cypriots should
accelerate their talks to reach a settlement to unify Cyprus. To not do so is
not only to let down their peoples in Cyprus and around the world but to ignore
the deeply liberal, democratic and secular traditions present in Christian
Greek Cypriots and Islamic Turkish Cypriots.
Australian Muslim
commentator Waleed Aly has spoken of his fears but those fears pale against the
persecution of free-thinking people of the Islamic faith in places such as
Turkey and Northern Cyprus.
If Erdogan does
follow Putin’s example and annexes Northern Cyprus, another beacon of secular
liberal democracy existing alongside Islam would be extinguished. Greek and
Turkish Cypriots in Cyprus and in Australia — indeed, all of us — would be diminished.
Theo Theophanous is
an Australian of Greek Cypriot background and a former state government
minister

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