Post-election crossroads: Turkish economy weighs options

Special Post-election crossroads: Turkish economy weighs options
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, center, his wife Emine Erdogan, right, and Mehmet Simsek attend the opening of Necat Nasiroglu Complex in Batman, Turkey, May 10, 2023. (Getty Images)
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Updated 02 April 2024
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Post-election crossroads: Turkish economy weighs options

Post-election crossroads: Turkish economy weighs options
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan is unlikely to sack Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek, because doing so would exacerbate economic pressure on Ankara
  • Eurasia Group’s Emre Peker: Despite more than a decade of political polarization that has worked to Erdogan’s advantage, people still vote with their pockets

ANKARA: After nationwide local elections on March 31 dealt a surprise blow to Turkiye’s ruling AK Party, eyes are now turning to the economy to see if the divided political landscape will translate into tougher economic measures in the period ahead.

The AKP came second in the polls for the first time since taking power in 2002, with most experts suggesting the results were largely driven by economic hardship, with skyrocketing inflation of nearly 70 percent and declining purchasing power.

Emre Peker, European director of political risk consultancy Eurasia Group, said President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is unlikely to sack Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek because, given the pre-election sell-off of the Turkish lira and the decline in the Turkish Central Bank’s foreign reserves, doing so would exacerbate economic pressure on Ankara.

“Nevertheless, after his election losses, Erdogan will demand to see results, especially in the fight against inflation. The picture will get worse before it gets better, with inflation expected to peak in May,” Peker told Arab News.

“Despite more than a decade of political polarization that has worked to Erdogan’s advantage, people still vote with their pockets. The AKP’s drubbing in Sunday’s election was Turkiye’s version of ‘it’s the economy, stupid’,” he added.

Central Bank reserves, excluding swap deals, are currently at minus $65 billion.

According to Peker, Erdogan’s concern over his declining political support will significantly increase the downside risks to Simsek’s ability to continue his policy of normalization, while the president will interpret voter rejection of the AKP as the cost of the policy to reduce inflation and achieve sustainable growth.

“Erdogan’s dismal electoral performance will reaffirm his need to fix the economy and increase pressure on Simsek to deliver results,” he said.

Simsek and his team have worked hard to normalize policy since taking office in June last year, securing significant investment pledges from the Gulf. Fitch recently upgraded Turkiye’s credit rating to B+.

Peker also noted that while Simsek and the Central Bank’s stance has won praise from foreign investors, their policies have squeezed consumer and commercial credit for many import-oriented businesses, with headline inflation rising toward 75 percent and sticky price increases in services and food hitting voters hard.

On Sunday night, shortly after the results were announced, Erdogan reiterated that the government would stick to its medium-term economic plan.

Similarly, Simsek wrote on X on April 1: “We will continue to strengthen and implement our medium-term program with determination ... We will transform the economy and increase productivity and competitiveness with the structural reforms to be implemented in line with the timetable announced in the program.”

With markets closely watching the country’s inflation performance, official inflation statistics for March will be released on April 4. The Central Bank raised its benchmark interest rate by 500 basis points to 50 per cent last month.

For Peker, Sunday’s election result will only make managing expectations more difficult, given Erdogan’s unorthodox economic views and previous policy reversals.

“Domestic and foreign investors will now be more concerned about the risk of Simsek’s ouster, which is likely to make it harder for Turkiye’s economic tsar to attract foreign investment. Erdogan is likely to continue to support Simsek’s policies in the short term, while calling for a rapid recovery,” he said.

Although Erdogan has declared 2024 the “year of retirees,” pensioners have been hit hard by the country’s economic challenges with pensions failing to keep pace with inflation and remaining below the minimum wage and hunger threshold.

The problem, however, is how the government will cope without the necessary budgetary resources. The new budget data and possible measures the Turkish authorities may take regarding government spending are also a source of concern for the markets. In the first two months of this year, the government’s budget ran a deficit of 304.5 billion lira ($9.467 billion).

Meanwhile, several of Turkiye’s industrial hubs, including Balikesir and Bursa, flipped to the opposition at Sunday’s elections.

Selva Demiralp, professor of economics at Koc University, says the opposition’s victory can be interpreted as the delayed toll of the economic crisis that came ahead of the May 2023 elections.

“The unsustainable accommodative policies masked the underlying economic problems at the time. Yet the government has run out of artillery and had to make an inevitable U-turn toward policy tightening, a move that was understandably unpopular with the public,” she told Arab News.

According to Demiralp, there were two theories as to why the AKP won the May 2023 elections.

“The first theory was that voters knew about the economic problems but believed the government could fix them, while the second theory was that voters hadn’t really felt the economic pinch yet. The local elections, 10 months later, seem to show that the second theory was right,” she said.

Investors’ sights are now on the direction of future economic policy.

Demiralp says there are two options on the table: to graciously accept the loss and fully support the current economic team, waiting for the tough medicine to work its magic until the 2028 general election, or to blame Simsek and his team for the local election defeat and replace them.

“I am leaning toward the first option because the second could spell disaster for the economy and the political cost of the disinflation program has already been paid with the local election defeat. The AKP now has four years to repair the damage from the misguided policies it has put in place. Indeed, Erdogan’s post-election speech indicated a preference for the first option,” she said.

If the election results had been more in favor of the AKP, Demiralp believes, this would have been seen as a public endorsement of its policies and no changes would have been necessary.

“However, given the apparent defeat of the AKP at the local level, even if the orthodox policies are continued, they may not be as strict to reduce the growth rate to 1.5 percent as implied in the Central Bank’s inflation report,” she said.

In an attempt to appease angry voters, she also suggests that the disinflation program could be relaxed slightly.

“As a result, inflation would be close to 50 percent and growth would be around 3 percent. If there’s no compromise on an IMF-like austerity policy, then opting for a deal with the IMF to secure funding would be a more logical option,” Demiralp added.


UN: New Syria authorities sending ‘constructive’ signals

UN: New Syria authorities sending ‘constructive’ signals
Updated 5 sec ago
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UN: New Syria authorities sending ‘constructive’ signals

UN: New Syria authorities sending ‘constructive’ signals
  • Since Bashar Assad’s ouster, the UNHCR had had ‘some contact with the interim authorities’
GENEVA: Syria’s new interim authorities have asked the United Nations refugee agency to remain in the country following the ouster of president Bashar Assad, sending a “constructive” signal, the organization said Friday.
Assad fled Syria on Sunday after a lightning offensive spearheaded by the Islamist Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) group and its allies, which ended five decades of repressive rule by Assad’s family.
The rule was marked by the mass jailing and killing of suspected dissidents, and nearly 14 years of civil war that left more than 500,000 people dead and millions displaced.
“The needs are absolutely huge,” Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR’s representative in Syria, told reporters in Geneva by video link from Damascus.
Since Assad’s ouster, the agency had had “some contact with the interim authorities,” he said, adding: “the initial signals that they are sending us are constructive.”
The authorities were saying “they want us to stay in Syria, that they appreciate the work that we have been doing now for many years, that they need us to continue doing that work,” Vargas Llosa said.
Most importantly, he said the interim authorities had indicated “they will provide us the necessary security to carry out those activities.”
The International Committee of the Red Cross meanwhile highlighted the towering task ahead to help Syrian families whose loved ones disappeared under the Assad rule.
In recent years, “we have been approached by tens of thousands of families who have come to us with what we call a tracing request,” said Stephan Sakalian, who heads the organization’s Syria delegation.
The ICRC has documented over 35,000 cases of disappearances, he told reporters from Damascus, adding the true number was likely far higher.
The organization is calling for the protection and preservation of archives found in detention facilities and elsewhere, as well as of burial sites.
“What we need now is of course a more structured and an urgent discussion with the interim government,” Sakalian said.
He said ICRC wanted to help determine “the best way to coordinate these efforts to preserve not only the documents but also the mass graves” and other information that could help “families in the future to identify the whereabouts and the fate of their beloved ones.”

Syria’s new rulers call for victory celebrations in streets

Syria’s new rulers call for victory celebrations in streets
Updated 32 min 36 sec ago
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Syria’s new rulers call for victory celebrations in streets

Syria’s new rulers call for victory celebrations in streets
  • Militant leader Abu Mohammed Al-Golani is now using his real name Ahmed Al-Sharaa
  • His call comes ahead of the first Friday prayers since Syria’s new leadership took control

DAMASCUS: Syria’s militant chief called on people across the country to celebrate “the victory of the revolution” on Friday, as G7 leaders looked to forge a common approach to the new government.

More than half a century of brutal rule by the Assad clan came to a sudden end on Sunday, after a lightning militant offensive led by Abu Mohammed Al-Golani’s Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) swept across the country and took the capital.

Ousted president Bashar Assad fled Syria, closing an era in which suspected dissidents were jailed or killed, and capping nearly 14 years of war that killed more than 500,000 people and displaced millions.

“I would like to congratulate the great Syrian people on the victory of the blessed revolution and I call on them to go to the streets to express their joy,” Golani said on Telegram.

Golani, who is now using his real name Ahmed Al-Sharaa, is set to attend Friday prayers at Damascus’s landmark Umayyad Mosque.

During the early days of Syria’s uprising in 2011, protesters would often gather after noon prayers on Fridays, the Muslim day of prayer and rest.

Assad’s overthrow has allowed Syrians to flood to prisons, hospitals and morgues in search of long-disappeared loved ones, hoping for a miracle, or at least closure.

“I turned the world upside down looking,” Abu Mohammed said as he searched for news of three missing relatives at the Mazzeh air base in Damascus.

“But I didn’t find anything at all. We just want a hint of where they were, one percent.”

Sunni Muslim HTS is rooted in Syria’s branch of Al-Qaeda and designated a terrorist organization by many Western governments, who now face the challenge of how to approach the country’s new transitional leadership.

The group has sought to moderate its rhetoric, and the interim government insists the rights of all Syrians will be protected.

The spokesman for the newly installed government, Obaida Arnaout, said that the country’s constitution and parliament would be suspended during a three-month transition.

“A judicial and human rights committee will be established to examine the constitution and then introduce amendments,” he said, pledging that the “rule of law” would be instituted.

Leaders of the Group of Seven countries, who will meet virtually at 1430 GMT on Friday, said they were ready to support the transition to an “inclusive and non-sectarian” government in Syria.

They called for the protection of human rights, including those of women and minorities, while emphasizing “the importance of holding the Assad regime accountable for its crimes.”

Inside much of Syria, the focus for now is on unraveling the secrets of Assad’s rule, and particularly the network of detention centers and suspected torture sites scattered across areas previously under government control.

Syria’s leadership said it is willing to cooperate with Washington in the search for US citizens who disappeared under Assad’s rule, including US journalist Austin Tice, who was abducted in 2012.

Another American, Travis Timmerman, has already been located alive and Blinken said Washington was working to bring him home.

The search for other missing detainees has ended more painfully, with hundreds of Syrians gathering Thursday to bury outspoken activist Mazen Al-Hamada.

In exile in the Netherlands, he publicly testified on the torture he was subjected to in Syrian prison.

He later returned to Syria and was detained. His body was among more than 30 found in a Damascus hospital morgue this week.

Assad was propped up by Russia — where a senior Russian official told US media he has fled — as well as Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group.

The militants launched their offensive on November 27, the same day a ceasefire took effect in the Israel-Hezbollah war, which saw Israel inflict staggering losses on Assad’s Lebanese ally.

Both Israel and Turkiye, which backs some of the militants who ousted Assad, have since carried out strikes inside Syria.

The fall of Assad has prompted some of the millions of Syrians who fled abroad to return home.

On Friday morning, around 60 people were waiting at Turkiye’s Oncupinar border crossing, anxious to reach Syria.

In the southern city of Sweida, the heartland of Syria’s Druze minority where anti-government demonstrations have been held for more than a year, hundreds took to the streets on Friday, singing and clapping in jubiliation.

“Our joy is indescribable,” said Haitham Hudeifa, 54. “Every province is celebrating this great victory.”


Freed Syrian prisoners return to their ‘death dormitory’

Freed Syrian prisoners return to their ‘death dormitory’
Updated 13 December 2024
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Freed Syrian prisoners return to their ‘death dormitory’

Freed Syrian prisoners return to their ‘death dormitory’
  • “Every day in this room, which used to be called ‘Steel 1 — the death dormitory,’ one to three people would die inside every day,” Hanania, 35, told Reuters

DAMASCUS:Basim Faiz Mawat stood in the Damascus cell that his fellow prisoners used to call the “death dormitory,” struggling to believe that the system that abused him for so long had been overthrown and his suffering had ended.
“I came here today only to see that truly nothing lasts forever,” the 48-year-old said as he and another freed prisoner, Mohammed Hanania, visited the detention center where their guards never showed mercy.
They were among thousands who spilled out of Syria’s prison system on Sunday after a lightning militia advance overthrew President Bashar Assad and ended five decades of his family’s rule. Many detainees were met by tearful relatives who thought they had been executed years earlier.
“Every day in this room, which used to be called ‘Steel 1 — the death dormitory,’ one to three people would die inside every day,” Hanania, 35, told Reuters.
“The sergeant was — when he didn’t lose someone, when someone didn’t die from weakness, he would kill him. He took them to the toilets and hit them with the heel of his shoe on their heads.”
Hanania walked on past long rows of empty cells. Names of prisoners — Mohammed Al-Masry, Ahmed and others — were scratched on walls with dates.
The floors were littered with rubble and discarded clothes. A row of blankets was still set out in one cell where prisoners had slept.
Both men looked up at an image on a wall of Assad, who is accused of torturing and killing thousands, abuses that were also rampant during his father Hafez’s reign of terror.
“No one could have believed this would happen,” said Mawat.

MASS EXECUTIONS
In another room, he stood beside a rusty blue ladder and described how he was blindfolded and forced to climb up the steps. Then his torturer would kick away the ladder and he would be suspended by his arms from the ceiling in agony.
“My shoulders were torn, and I couldn’t say a single word. No one could bear more than five or 10 minutes,” he said.
Rights groups have reported mass executions in Syria’s prisons. In 2017, the United States said it had identified a new crematorium at the Sednaya military prison on the outskirts of Damascus to dispose of hanged prisoners.
Syrians have flocked to the prisons looking for their loved ones. Some have been released alive, others have been identified among the dead and thousands more have not yet been found.
Syrian militia leader Ahmad Al-Sharaa — better known as Abu Mohammed Al-Golani — the main commander of the militants who toppled Assad, has said he will close the prisons and hunt down anyone involved in the torture or killing of detainees.
Assad fled to his ally Russia where he was granted asylum.
“At this stage, if everyone thinks about taking revenge, we have no solution other than to forgive,” Hanania said.
“But the criminal who has blood (on their hands) should be held accountable. I will leave my rights to be granted by God.”


Syria Kurds warm up to new leaders but fear for hard-won gains

Syria Kurds warm up to new leaders but fear for hard-won gains
Updated 13 December 2024
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Syria Kurds warm up to new leaders but fear for hard-won gains

Syria Kurds warm up to new leaders but fear for hard-won gains
  • Kurdish authorities have made overtures to Islamist-led militants who seized power in Syria last week

QAMISHLI: Kurdish authorities have made overtures to Islamist-led militants who seized power in Syria last week, but the long-oppressed community fears it could lose hard-won gains it made during the war, including limited self-rule.
The Kurds faced discrimination during more than 50 years of Assad family rule. They were barred, for example, from offering education in their own language.
As militants led by Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) seized power, ousting president Bashar Assad, the Kurdish authorities in northeastern Syria have multiplied overtures to the new leaders, like adopting the three-starred flag used by the opposition.
Mutlu Civiroglu, a Washington-based analyst and expert on the Kurds, said that the fate of Syria’s Kurdish authorities “remains uncertain,” noting “the rapidly shifting dynamics on the ground.”
Syria’s Kurds face “mounting pressure from the Turkish government and factions under its control,” he said, as Ankara-backed fighters seized two Kurdish-held areas in the north during the militant offensive.
Last week, Mazloum Abdi who heads the US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) welcomed “an opportunity to build a new Syria based on democracy and justice that guarantees the rights of all Syrians.”
But many in the northeast are concerned about the future of their autonomous region.
“The factions in Damascus... don’t recognize the Kurds, and now they want to whitewash their image in front of the international community,” Ali Darwish, a Kurdish resident of the northeastern city of Qamishli told AFP.
“But we hope that we, as Kurds, will be able to preserve our areas and improve the economic situation,” the 58-year-old said.
“We hope for positive solutions in the future.”


Minority groups suffered during the civil war that broke out in 2011, particularly after the Islamic State (IS) group overran large parts of the country three years later.
HTS, the Islamist group that led the offensive that toppled Assad, is rooted in Syria’s branch of Al-Qaeda and is proscribed as a terrorist organization by many Western governments, though it has sought to moderate its rhetoric.
The SDF spearheaded the fight that defeated IS jihadists in Syria in 2019 with US backing — putting Washington at odds with NATO ally Ankara, which has operated militarily against the Kurds.
On Thursday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the SDF was “critical” to preventing a resurgence of IS jihadists in Syria following Assad’s ouster.
On the same day, Turkish intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalin visited Damascus and Ankara named a new chief of mission for its long-closed embassy in Damascus, which it has pledged to reopen.
Civiroglu said that “Syrian Kurds face several significant challenges, the most pressing of which is Turkiye’s ongoing hostility toward them.”
Since 2016, Turkiye has staged multiple operations against the SDF.
Ankara views the People’s Protection Units (YPG), a key part of the SDF, as an extension of the banned Kurdish militants who have fought a decades-long insurgency inside Turkiye.
“All Turkish attacks and threats against the Kurds are seen as directly or indirectly aimed at undermining Kurdish autonomy and expanding Turkish control in northern Syria,” Civiroglu said.
On the ground, fighters of Syria’s new government have taken over the eastern city of Deir Ezzor from Kurdish-led forces, who had briefly moved in as government troops and their Iran-backed allies withdrew.
Syria’s new leaders have said repeatedly that religious minorities will not be harmed under their rule, but they have not mentioned ethnic minorities like the Kurds.
In Qamishli, residents told AFP they were glad Assad was ousted, but had mounting concerns.
Kurds, who represent the largest ethnic minority in Syria, want a “democratic state that respects everyone’s rights and religion,” said Khorshed Abo Rasho, 68.
“We want a federal state, not a dictatorship,” he added.
Fahd Dawoud, a 40-year-old lawyer, was hopeful that an inclusive government can be formed.
“We hope that the new government will represent all Syrians and won’t exclude any party,” he said.


Reassured ‘for now’, Aleppo’s Christians prepare for Christmas

Reassured ‘for now’, Aleppo’s Christians prepare for Christmas
Updated 13 December 2024
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Reassured ‘for now’, Aleppo’s Christians prepare for Christmas

Reassured ‘for now’, Aleppo’s Christians prepare for Christmas
  • The country’s new rulers have sought to reassure Syria’s religious minorities
  • In multi-confessional Syria, Catholic and Orthodox Christmas and Easter holidays have always been marked

ALEPPO, Syria: For the Catholic Marist Brothers of Aleppo, one of nearly a dozen Christian communities in Syria’s second city, today’s most pressing question is how to decorate the Christmas tree.
In the days since a lightning offensive spearheaded by Islamist militants overthrew former president Bashar Assad, the country’s new rulers have sought to reassure Syria’s religious minorities.
The efforts have been successful, at least “for now,” said Brother Georges Sabe, who took part earlier this week in a meeting between militants and local Christian representatives.
It was the second since the December 8 capture of the capital Damascus.
“They were very reassuring,” he said.
“’Continue to live normally, you’re coming up to your Christmas holiday, nothing will change for you,’” he said he was told.
“So far, nothing has changed,” he added.
Assad, a member of Syria’s Alawite minority, sought to present his government as a protector of secularism and the country’s many confessions though government intolerance for dissent extended to all groups.
During the civil war, militants routinely repressed minority groups.
Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, the Islamist group that led Assad’s overthrow, has its roots in Syria’s branch of Al-Qaeda, though it has sought to moderate its rhetoric.
Sabe noted that the representatives of the new government he met — “three fighters and two politicians” — were all from Aleppo.
“One of them was finishing his doctorate in mechanical engineering before the war. He told us that he’d had a Christian neighbor.”
So, the community has resumed “normal life, with morning and evening masses,” and Christmas decorations are going up, he added.
“During 13 years of war, I learned to live day by day. We’ll see what tomorrow brings.”
In multi-confessional Syria, Catholic and Orthodox Christmas and Easter holidays have always been marked, along with the new year.
The community has been hard hit by emigration during the civil war. Of the approximately 200,000 Christians who lived in Aleppo before 2011, just 30,000 remain in the city, according to community leaders.
But it remains fully integrated and considers itself Syrian before anything else.
“We don’t want to go, we want to stay on good terms with the Muslims. We speak the same language,” insisted Sabe.
So far, a promise to allow churches to continue ringing their bells has been kept, and they sound at dusk to mark mass at the Church of Saint Francis, also known as the Latin Cathedral.
“People here have a deep spiritual sense,” explained Father Bahjat as several dozen parishioners arrived for the service.
“During all the years of war, they never stopped coming to church.”
He said he could understand why some have expressed concern, especially abroad.
“On the ground, we didn’t see any acts of discrimination, so we are full of hope that our people will coexist in peace,” he said.
Marina Ayoub was arriving for mass as usual. She said she never misses a service, as they give her “hope.”
“The bishop has told us that he is not worried and that we can continue to come as usual, and celebrate our masses and holidays.”
Opposite the church sits a property that had been occupied by the ruling Baath party and has now been reclaimed by the community.
The Vatican flag hangs outside, and the new government has told Christians that church property will not be touched.
The decision by the head of the transitional government to appear before an Islamist flag earlier this week sparked some fears.
“But the next day, during an interview with Al Jazeera, it had disappeared,” Sabe noted.
“That shows that they are ready for dialogue.”
Still, among some in the community there are concerns.
“They say that they will respect all faiths... but I’m waiting to see,” said one worshipper, who spoke on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the subject.
“I’ll judge them by their actions.”
He said he was watching for “little signs.” noting that restaurants in Aleppo were no longer openly serving alcohol.
“They hide it,” he said.
For now, the Marist Brothers charitable association is focusing on preparations for a concert it will put on for 120 Muslim children it helps.
“They are poor and displaced by the war,” said Mariam Arab as she debated how best to decorate the Christmas tree.
“The most important thing is to find a way to cheer them up.”