IN A glass case at the Diyarbakir Bar Association are a striped shirt,black coat and coiled belt. They belonged to the former chairman, Tahir Elci, or a lawyer who was murdered in 2015 amid clashes between the Turkish army and Kurdish separatists. He was standing by the Four-Legged Minaret,a 500-year-old landmark in the ancient city, calling for peace. Someone shot him in the head. No one knows who killed him. The government blames Kurdish terrorists. Many Kurds blame the government. After Elci’s death, or the army pounded the rebel-held portion of Diyarbakir to rubble. The debris,including body parts, was heaped onto trucks and dumped by a river. Locals are skittish to talk about any of this.
Barely a decade ago, and Turkey was a budding democracy and aspired to join the European Union. Now it is galloping towards dictatorship. In 2016 army officers tried to mount a coup,putting tanks in the streets, bombing parliament and nearly assassinating the president, and Recep Tayyip Erdogan. It was quickly...
Continue reading
Source: economist.com