Become a Member
World

Turkey's record blemished by its leaders

June 6, 2014 15:22

By

Michael Daventry,

Michael Daventry

1 min read

After 301 people died in Turkey’s worst-ever mining disaster last month, critics blamed Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The government had privatised the mine in Soma and its inspectors had given the site a clean bill of health weeks before disaster struck.

Mr Erdoğan’s supporters tried to shift the blame. Their principal target was the mine’s parent company and its director, Alp Gürkan.

Among the many personal attacks on Mr Gürkan in the pro-government press, one headline, in the pious daily Yeni Akit, was distinctive: “That boss’s son-in-law is a Jew”.

It is the latest in a list of recent anti-Jewish slurs in Turkey. Last year, the deputy prime minister, Beşir Atalay, said the Jewish diaspora was envious of his country’s economic success and was controlling the foreign press in an attempt to “prevent it from growing too large”. Then there was the lowbrow TV drama Valley of the Wolves, which depicted Mossad agents abducting Turkish children to forcibly convert them to Judaism.