LETTER FROM ISTANBUL
Refugee
deal will cement Erdoğan’s control
Turkey
doesn’t have a ‘magic wand’ to wave away the crisis — but
it’s the EU’s best shot, and Erdoğan knows it.
By ALEV SCOTT
3/9/16, 5:38 AM CET
http://www.politico.eu/article/refugee-eu-migration-deal-will-cement-erdogans-control/
ISTANBUL — A
tentative agreement on refugees with an increasingly desperate EU
could help President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan consolidate his power in
Turkey. While voters are increasingly polarized by his hardline
policies, the prospect of EU visa restrictions being lifted by June
could persuade them to grant him executive powers in a new
constitution proposed by the governing party.
The Turks drove a
hard bargain at Monday’s emergency summit in Brussels, taking
European leaders by surprise. They have until their next summit on
March 17-18 to respond to Turkey’s demands, which included an
additional €3 billion from the EU — on top of €3 billion
already pledged — in return for keeping refugees out of Europe.
A key part of the
preliminary deal involves a restrictive “one in, one out” policy
on refugees, whereby for every non-eligible refugee Turkey takes back
from Greece, a Syrian refugee will be resettled from Turkey to an EU
member country.
Political opponents
and rights groups expressed their dismay at the trade-off: Save the
Children decried “the twisted logic behind the proposed deal that
requires one person to risk their life at sea in order for another to
enjoy safe and legal passage into Europe.”
“A fundamental
contradiction lies at the heart of the EU-Turkey deal taking shape,”
said Bill Frelick, refugee rights director at Human Rights Watch.
“The parties failed to say how individual needs for international
protection would be fairly assessed during the rapid-fire mass
expulsions they agreed would take place.”
“The
AKP has played hard ball with the European Union and won” —
Howard Eissenstat, St. Lawrence University
Despite the many
Turkish and EU officials present at Monday’s summit, where Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu represented Ankara, the real negotiations
were reportedly conducted largely between Erdoğan and German
Chancellor Angela Merkel. The lifting of visa requirements in
particular was seen by many as a huge coup for Erdoğan’s Justice
and Development Party (AKP).
“The AKP has
played hard ball with the European Union and won,” said Howard
Eissenstat, a Turkey expert at St. Lawrence University. “The visa
agreement, in particular, underlines a narrative of Turkey as having
finally ‘arrived’ and is something that previous governments
could only have dreamed of achieving.”
“A central part of
the AKP’s political brand is that it has allowed Turkey to play
what many Turks would see as its ‘rightful role’ on the world
stage. This agreement underlines that narrative.”
* * *
Pro-government
newspapers in Turkey such as Yeni Şafak and Sabah enthusiastically
hailed the news that EU officials had cautiously accepted Turkey’s
new terms. Sabah also posited that a deal had not been signed
immediately because EU leaders were “unable to agree” to a
“Turkish plan” for solving the migrant crisis.
But skeptical
Turkish commentators questioned the “one in, one out” policy. One
asked on Twitter: “If Syrians & others prefer to wait in Turkey
and don’t go [to] Greece to be sent back, how many of them will be
resettled in the EU?”
The Financial Times
pointed out that the EU has resettled only 3,407 refugees since July,
a figure that bodes ill for future resettlement plans.
“The
EU is trying so hard not to upset Erdoğan, and that’s a big
mistake” — Selahattin Demirtaş, co-chair of the
Peoples’ Democratic Party
Political opponents
of Turkey’s AKP government have criticized the EU for pandering to
Turkey at the cost of refugees from the wider region and potentially
from Turkey itself.
Selahattin Demirtaş,
co-chair of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), whose performance
in the June 2015 general elections temporarily robbed the AKP of its
13-year ruling majority, and whose leaders now face jail terms for
“terrorist links” to Kurdish militants, has been particularly
outspoken.
“The EU is trying
so hard not to upset Erdoğan, and that’s a big mistake,”
Demirtaş said in an interview Monday. “The world has gone very
silent on what’s happening in Turkey, and that’s saddening and
also short-sighted.”
* * *
Demirtaş referred
to the sieges of Kurdish towns such as Cizre in the southeast of
Turkey, where the HDP says hundreds have died and thousands more have
fled in recent months due to the ongoing domestic conflict. “If the
war in Turkey continues like this, you’re also going to have
refugees from Turkey.”
Other critics of the
government also raised questions about the recent seizure of media
group Zaman, which has been critical of the AKP since 2013. The
seizure was immediately condemned by European and American officials,
including the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, John Bass, who said he was
“deeply disturbed” by the news.
But the urgency of
the EU’s need to strike a deal with Turkey to alleviate the refugee
crisis is expected to take precedence over any concern about threats
to the media.
“I think the main
criterion for the EU side will be whether the deal in the making with
Turkey will be sufficiently reliable on a medium-term basis,” said
an Austrian diplomat. She speculated that concerns over the possible
illegality of sending back refugees to Turkey from Greece will not
scupper the prospective deal. “Stakes are high. I am not sure legal
questions will be dominating.”
Ankara
insists that its border forces are under huge pressure and that it
cannot continue to shoulder the burden almost single-handedly.
In the week leading
up to Monday’s summit, Turkey took unprecedented steps to prove its
ability to uphold its side of the proposed bargain by accepting
refugees — many of them from Afghanistan — sent back by Greek
authorities.
“We can confirm
that Turkey has started to receive refugees from Greece in line with
the readmission agreement previously signed with Greek authorities,”
said a Turkish official from the foreign ministry.
A readmission
protocol was signed between Turkey and Greece in 2002, but was
largely ignored until last week. Questions have been raised by the
U.N. and organizations such as Human Rights Watch over the legality
of preventing refugees from applying for asylum on EU territory —
including in Greek waters, where NATO ships are currently patrolling
— and of sending back vulnerable families to Turkey, where many are
not given the opportunity to apply formally for refugee status.
Syrians have so far only been given “guest” status.
Ankara insists that
its border forces are under huge pressure and that it cannot continue
to shoulder the burden almost single-handedly.
“We do not have a
magic wand,” said the Turkish foreign affairs official. “We have
already taken significant steps to halt illegal migration; we
modified our visa regimes for some third country citizens, tightened
our e-visa regulations; passed a legislation allowing Syrians to work
as of January 15.”
This latest piece of
legislation, while generally welcomed by Turkish employers, will not
necessarily be in the best interests of Syrian refugees forced to
remain in Turkey.
Cheap labor
In Kadın Pazarı, a
street bazaar in Istanbul’s Fatih district, every shop employs at
least one Syrian refugee. Sebahattin, who declined to give his second
name, owns a popular shop selling spices, honey and dried fruit from
the province of Siirt in eastern Turkey. He employs five Syrians,
with whom he communicates in basic Arabic. If he hadn’t hired them,
he says, they would probably steal to survive.
“What are these
poor people to do?” he asked. “They have wives, children, how
will they survive if we do not give them work?”
Although the Turkish
authorities only granted Syrians the legal right to work two months
ago, Sebahattin claims police turned a blind eye to businesses, like
his own, that employ Syrians off the books.
Business owners
habitually pay Syrians much less than the Turkish minimum wage,
putting the refugees at greater risk of poor working conditions and
exploitation.
The risks are not
insignificant. Under Turkish employment law, a non-Turk can only be
employed if the business already employs five Turks, so employers
with a higher foreigner-to-Turk employee ratio faced fines of 10,000
Turkish lira for each illegal worker. Sebahattin was told he would
have to pay 10,000 Turkish lira per worker.
But, considering the
high cost of paying social security (nearly 40 percent of a monthly
wage) and work permit fees, it seems likely Turkish employers will
continue to employ Syrians and pay them under the table. Business
owners habitually pay Syrians much less than the Turkish minimum
wage, and refugees are at greater risk of poor working conditions and
exploitation.
Sebahattin admits he
pays his Syrian employees much less than he would pay a Turkish
worker with similar skills. He calls it the natural outcome of
European countries’ refusal to share the burden of the crisis,
especially given Turkey’s recent economic downturn.
“What are we meant
to do? There is 10 percent unemployment in Turkey already. People
will not be happy about cheap Syrian employment, of course. But do
you blame me? What is Europe doing, anyway? [They] want us to keep
the Syrians, they can’t complain.”
Aside from the
consequences to Turkey’s economy and labor market, the most
dramatic implications of the migrant deal, for Turks at least, may be
political. Erdoğan stands to gain enormously from his apparent
success in negotiating a good deal for Turkey on the migration issue.
The president is pushing for a constitutional overhaul, but has met
resistance from opposition parties, as well as skeptical voters.
“This [deal] comes
as President Erdoğan is almost certainly gearing up for a renewed
push at constitutional changes that will significantly enhance
presidential powers and cement his control over the country,” said
Eissenstat. “In general, I think the AKP is in a pretty strong
position to push forward at this juncture. Today’s agreement only
improves this.”
Alev Scott is the
author of the book “Turkish Awakening” (Faber & Faber, 2014)
and a freelance writer based in Istanbul. Follow her on Twitter
@AlevScott.
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