From the blog of friends in Istanbul.
View from our flat. |
In the wake of the Gezi Park events of last summer, it was not
altogether unexpected that the AK Party government refused to give
permission to unions to gather in Taksim Square this May Day, 2014. They
had in fact refused permission for any political gathering in the
square since Gezi. The response from Turkey's small and fragmented
organized labor movement (representing less than 10% of the workforce)
was divided. Several union confederations, considered less antagonistic
to the government, decided to gather in Kadiköy, on the city's Asian
side. Other confederations, seen as more 'leftist' and 'militant' and
anti-AK Party, insisted on their constitutional right to celebrate in
Taksim, which meant donning hard hat and gas mask and going at it with
the cops. The leader of one of them announced that she wanted to see
'all those who are opposed to the AK Party government' in Taksim on May
Day. (Hmmm. And what about all of those workers and poor people who vote
for the AKP?)
Cihangir center occupied. |
The government refused to budge, citing the alleged possibility of a
terrorist attack, but in fact making it clear that Taksim Square would
permanently be off-limits for political gatherings. To back up their
decision, the government brought in nearly 40,000 police and 50 water
cannon vehicles; canceled ferries, metro and bus service that might
bring participants to Taksim; and set up police barricades on all
streets leading up to the square.
All of this meant that most of us who perhaps would have attended a May
Day celebration ended up staying home under lockdown either on one side
of the police barricades or the other. The government backed up its
threats to keep the square free of demonstrators. In various parts of
the city, especially Okmeydanı, Beşıktaş and Şişli, groups insisting on
marching to Taksim were met with tear gas, rubber bullets and water
cannons. In our neighborhood, which lies just south of Taksim, and which
in the past has experienced its share of tear gas, a relaxed atmosphere
prevailed with the cops spending most of the day in the local tea
gardens, although the police barricades caused inconvenience for both
residents and tourists. The people who suffered the most this May Day
were workers who had to go to their jobs and found that their mode of
public transportation had been canceled or who couldn't get to their
workplaces because of police barricades. Many of them probably lost a
day's pay because of the extreme measures the government took to close
down Taksim.
Our street barricaded. |
The Turkish working class suffers from long working hours, low pay, unsafe working conditions and a growing number of super-exploited immigrant workers - especially Syrians - in need of solidarity. Did May Day 2014 put these workers in a stronger position to fight for their rights? Sadly, no. Union officials grossly miscalculated the relationship of forces between the government and the unions. The labor movement failed to forge a unified response to the ban on Taksim Square that clearly put the onus on the government and was unable to formulate demands that speak to the pressing needs of Turkish workers. Most importantly they had no strategic objective of winning over new layers of the working class, including those who currently support the AK Party. The result was a divided, scattered non-event, that unnecessarily put people in harm's way and exposed the lack of leadership that workers in Turkey face today.
The memory of the Martyrs of Chicago and the Martyrs of Taksim, 1977 deserves better.
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