About us | Advertising | Contact | Get Home Delivery | Archive
Mar 21, 2010 Homepage
News
Politics
Business
Interviews
Columnists
Op-Ed
Arts & Culture
Expat Zone
Features
Travel
Leisure
Life
Cartoons
Women
Health Briefs
Weird But True
Sports
Turkish Press Review
Today's think tanks
Turkey in Foreign Press


News Politics

Prime Minister Erdoğan slams CHP's Öymen over anti-Alevi remarks

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan yesterday lashed out at Republican People’s Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Onur Öymen over his remarks two weeks ago that equated a past Alevi revolt with a terrorist campaign.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan yesterday lashed out at Republican People’s Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Onur Öymen over his remarks two weeks ago that equated a past Alevi revolt with a terrorist campaign.
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan yesterday lashed out at Republican People's Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Onur Öymen over his remarks two weeks ago that equated a past Alevi revolt with a terrorist campaign.

Today's interactive toolbox
Bookmark and Share
Video Photo Audio
Send to print Send to my friend
Post your comments
Read comments

Speaking at the 3rd Grand Congress of his Justice and Development Party's (AK Party) Expanded Provincial Chairmen meeting, Erdoğan quoted Seyit Rıza, the Alevi leader who led the 1937 Dersim revolt in the Alevi town of Tunceli, which was violently suppressed by the government of the time using a military campaign that resulted in the deaths of some 90,000 people. In speech he gave two weeks ago, CHP's Öymen gave this revolt as an example of an anti-terror campaign, greatly offending and angering the country's Alevi community with his statement. Erdoğan, quoting Seyit Rıza's words, said: “We are the children of Karbala. We are innocent. It is wrong, it is cruel and it is a sin.” In criticism of Öymen and the CHP, he also said, “How can you associate approving treating people who repeat [Seyit Rıza's words] in the same way as those in Karbala were treated with love of the nation and of humanity?”

Erdoğan said he hoped that the country’s Alevis, who have traditionally always voted for the CHP, will finally see the CHP for what it really is. “I believe that my Alevi brothers will see the real face of them.” He said he had no doubt that Öymen’s words were not a slip of the tongue, but rather a conscious and deliberate reflection of the CHP’s true mentality

Karbala is the site of a massacre in which the Prophet Muhammad's grandson Husain and his supporters were brutally beheaded. He said he hoped that the country's Alevis, who have traditionally always voted for the CHP, will finally see the CHP for what it really is.

They accused the CHP of using Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the nation’s founder, to block their backward mentality. “I believe that my Alevi brothers and sisters will see the real face of these exploiters.” He said he had no doubt that Öymen’s words were not a slip of the tongue or a mistake, but rather a conscious and deliberate reflection of the CHP’s true mentality.

He also criticized CHP Tunceli-born deputy Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who was initially silent on Öymen’s words but who later called on him to resign when the Alevi community’s outrage failed to subside, only to backpedal from his demand when CHP leader Deniz Baykal showed that he stood by Öymen.

He also accused leaders of the CHP and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) of using coarse language in their addresses. “Please keep your children away from the television when these leaders are speaking,” Erdoğan said.

In yesterday’s speech, the prime minister highlighted that his party’s commitment to serve distant villages, districts and precincts had remained firmly in place along with the country’s will to grow further. Erdoğan said his party was the only party that garnered votes in every part of the country. Recalling that Nov. 18 is the seventh anniversary of the AK Party’s coming to power, he said the party was working to provide Turkey with a new language in politics. He said the party did not employ discriminatory language or one that might cause tension.

He criticized his opponents by using a couplet from Sheik Edebali, an 11th century religious preacher who inspired the founders of the Ottoman state. “Rage is for them and meekness is for us; being offended is for them and apologizing is for us; accusation is for them, bearing it is for us; weakness is for them, tolerance for us; discordance is for them, justice is for us; injustice is for them, forgiveness is for us,” he said. Erdoğan also said the government’s democratic initiative, which seeks to end terror by expanding the rights of Kurdish citizens, would greatly benefit the country. He said the government has to solve the problem of terrorism in the country as well as solve the Kurdish and Alevi problems and problems faced by other minorities in order to strengthen the feelings of belonging felt by all of the country’s citizens.

He said the Kurdish question has been debated for years, but despite this, it has turned into and remains a chronic problem with the mentality of “let things be as they have always been.” However, he said maintaining the status quo would come at a high price and would mean more dead soldiers, more bloodshed and more grieving mothers. “I say this openly: Defending the continuation of the status quo is condoning and even being an accomplice in deaths, conflicts, destruction, injustice, illegality and unfairness.”

21 November 2009, Saturday

TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES  İSTANBUL
Comments on this article

Hassan , Nov 21 2009 18:35, Saturday
I think all honest people should support this wise man( the prime minister).Actually, he wants to spread justice and equ...
Esfandyar Luristani , Nov 21 2009 15:25, Saturday
Aferin hizar Aferin Erdoghan Agha . Shira merd, Khuda perest ve muselman. A borne winner , Reality is on ...
Meat , Nov 21 2009 14:09, Saturday
How can an Alevi be a child of Kerbala when Alevis are not even Muslim.

Click to read the details of comments

   

The most read articles of this category

Deep state did great injustice to non-Muslim minorities, says Çelik
Harsh rhetoric heralds gloomy spring for normalization
Anatolia chock full of waste
Visits abroad proof of multilayered foreign policy
Samanyolu TV increasingly popular outside Turkey
Expert view: sept. 12 coup generals can face trial
Covered women still awaiting solution to discrimination
Turkey celebrates Nevruz, arrival of spring today
Does recalling envoys really work as a foreign policy tool?
Turkey fails in fighting violence against woman


The most read articles

Deep state did great injustice to non-Muslim minorities, says Çelik
Harsh rhetoric heralds gloomy spring for normalization
Anatolia chock full of waste
Visits abroad proof of multilayered foreign policy
Samanyolu TV increasingly popular outside Turkey
Turkey moves on own initiative, vows to stick to fiscal discipline
Expert view: sept. 12 coup generals can face trial
Covered women still awaiting solution to discrimination
Turkey celebrates Nevruz, arrival of spring today
Does recalling envoys really work as a foreign policy tool?