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Breeding Intolerance: Turkish Soccer Fans Disrespect Islamic State Victims

Turkish fans twice in two months disrupted moments of silence for victims of Islamic State attacks in Ankara and Paris in a demonstration of the kind of intolerance bred by religiously-cloaked authoritarianism in countries like Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

The fans demonstrative empathy with the Islamic State by shouting Allahu Akbar, God is Great, during moments of silence at the beginning of two soccer matches represented more than simple identification with the jihadist group or evidence of a substantial support base in Turkey. It signalled a shift in attitudes among some segments of Turkish society as a result of 12 years of rule by one of modern Turkey’s most important leaders that increasingly has been infused with notions of ‘us’ and ‘them.’

In Turkey, them is often Kurds, who account for up to 20 percent of the population. Kurds were prominent among the victims in Ankara in October and an earlier IS attack in July in southeastern Turkish town of Suruc. The Suruc attack sparked renewed hostilities between the Turkish military and the insurgent Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

The fan’s provocative disrespect for innocent victims of political violence resembled tweets by conservative followers of Wahhabism, Saudi Arabia’s austere interpretation of Islam described by dissident Saudi scholar Madawi Al-Rasheed as “militarized religious nationalism.”

On Twitter, these Saudis projected the recent downing of a Russian airliner and attacks in Paris as legitimate revenge for atrocities committed by French colonial rule in Algeria and Russia in its wars in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s authoritarianism, packaged with a religious veneer, is primarily driven by the hubris of the Turkish leader’s hunger for power and grandeur. Unlike Saudi leaders, Erdogan is not beholden to a clerical counterparty.

Also, unlike Saudi leaders, Erdogan has to take into account a secular society that is steeped in pluralism where debate is freewheeling despite his attempts to suppress his critics and muzzle the press and freedom of expression. Erdogan’s conservative Islamism is moreover a far cry from the retrograde interpretation of Islam that Saudi Arabia, which claims the Qur’an as its fundamental document.

Fan disrespect for the victims of IS violence “reflects an alarming sense of estrangement from the victims and the communities to which they belong. This lack of empathy could well stem from the callousness of excluding ‘the other’ (and possibly lead to one’s own sense of exclusion being transformed into radical hostility expressed in violent action) … The whistles and chants, which continued during the Greek national anthem, demonstrate how Turkey’s political culture has changed since President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in 2002,” said Al-Monitor columnist Kadir Gursel.

Cumhurriyet newspaper reported that the youth wing of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party AKP whose members had been granted free access to the stadium had instigated the booing of a moment of silence for the 130 victims of the Paris attacks at the beginning of a match in Istanbul between Turkey and Greece. Two of Cumhurriyet’s top journalists were indicted on charges of espionage for disclosing that trucks belonging to the Turkish intelligence agency MIT had been used to ferry weapons to Islamist opposition groups in Syria.

Erdogan condemned the incident, not because it demonstrated contempt for the Paris victims but because it amounted to disrespect for the Greek national anthem. “There was a minute of silence, after which the national anthems were played. And then those irresponsible people, probably a few hundreds of them, started to boo. This is incomprehensible. We are not a nation incapable of tolerating even the national anthem of another country. That’s not in the genes of this nation. How would we feel if someone else did the same to us? One is supposed to listen through it quietly, and that’s it,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan has been equally deceptive in his rejection of criticism that Turkey has turned a blind eye to the flow of foreign fighters transiting through Turkey to Syria. “We don’t claim there are no Daesh militants in Turkey today. Foreign fighters have gone to Syria from France, Britain and Germany … They couldn’t have crossed from Turkey to Syria if we had received certain information. What can we do if we don’t get information? Are we supposed to stop tourist entries and exits? They would then start screaming that Turkey has banned freedom of travel.”

Erdogan appeared to disregard the fact that it was Turkish nationals who killed 134 people in recent months in the Ankara and Suruc attacks. A Pew Research Center poll found that 18 percent of those surveyed in Turkey were sympathetic towards IS while 19 percent did not have an opinion about the group.

IS’s inroads into Turkey were evident after the Ankara bombing in a stadium in the conservative Anatolian city of Konya, when Islamist fans disrupted a moment of silence for the victims of the attack. Nacacililar Konyaspor, the support group of Konya’s foremost club, published a video on its Facebook page of the protest with the comment: ““The moment of silence was not allowed in Konya.” It described the Ankara victims who died while participating in a peace march as “peace-loving traitors.”

Turkish-American soccer blogger John Blasing said the disrespect represented “a nationalist/Islamist undercurrent within Turkish society that has occasionally raised its head with disastrous consequences, and one that now wants to equate all Kurds and leftists with the labels ‘terrorists’ and ‘traitor.’ It is, for lack of a better term, a dangerous latent Islamo-fascism lying just beneath the surface of Turkish society. It is the same undercurrent that expresses itself in the Turkish state’s ambivalence towards ISIS,” a reference to IS’s former name.

Turkish media reports and witness accounts from the pre-dominantly southeastern Turkish town of Idil seem to bear out Blasing’s assertion. The reports included video uploaded on YouTube showing police forces clad in black and wearing balaclavas as the celebrated after an anti-Kurdish operation  by firing automatic weapons in the air and chanting ‘Allahu Akbar,’ a break with past practice of shouting purely nationalistic slogans.

Graffiti on walls in southeastern towns announced the arrival of Esedullah, the Lions of Allah. In parliament, a Kurdish deputy compared the masked men to IS militants and asserted that they had chanted IS slogans while terrorizing civilians in southeastern neighbourhoods and town.

Establishing who Esedullah exactly are is difficult but Turkish media reports and witness accounts suggest that they are the Islamist soccer fans’ security force counterpart, units that carry their religiosity on their sleeve, operate with brutality, and reflect nationalist anti-Kurdish sentiment. Kurds in southeast Turkey charge their approach and mentality resembles that of IS.

Says human rights activist Omer Kemal Cengiz: “Regardless of whether this perception has any factual basis or stems from psychological fears only, one thing is certain: It serves no good to Turkey’s Kurdish problem, already mired in conflict, tensions and mistrust.”

Note:  This article was originally published in the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer and has been reproduced under arrangement. Web link

James M. Dorsey is a Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies as Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, co-director of the Institute of Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg, and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer. Email

As part of its editorial policy, the MEI@ND standardizes spelling and date formats to make the text uniformly accessible and stylistically consistent. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views/positions of the MEI@ND. Editor, MEI@ND: P R Kumaraswamy