Turkish opposition's anti-refugee stance threatens all of us
It is no secret that the opposition Good Party (IP), the Victory Party (ZP) and the Republican People’s Party (CHP) fueled xenophobia in Türkiye with reference to Syrian asylum-seekers and illegal migration ahead of the May 2023 elections. The opposition’s joint presidential candidate and CHP chair, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, built his campaign around anti-refugee sentiment – which effectively triggered the negative side effects of the cost of living. It seems highly likely that the CHP and the rest will resort to the same tactics for next year’s municipal elections.
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Unfortunately, xenophobia has been on the rise in Türkiye. This is not about patriotism in the sense of one’s unwavering commitment to our nation’s interests, independence and global impact. Instead, we are talking about an exclusionary attitude that manifests as verbal or physical violence – which one encounters frequently on social media. The current situation affects asylum-seekers as well as tourists and international students. It relates to the dissemination of anti-Arab messages that recently brought tears to the eyes of a Moroccan tourist. The rate at which the xenophobic discourse spreads rings alarm bells.
It is no secret that the opposition Good Party (IP), the Victory Party (ZP) and the Republican People’s Party (CHP) fueled xenophobia in Türkiye with reference to Syrian asylum-seekers and illegal migration ahead of the May 2023 elections. The opposition’s joint presidential candidate and CHP chair, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, built his campaign around anti-refugee sentiment – which effectively triggered the negative side effects of the cost of living. It seems highly likely that the CHP and the rest will resort to the same tactics for next year’s municipal elections.
Refusing to reflect on his latest election defeat, Kılıçdaroğlu made the following remarks in a recent chat with reporters: “Let me tell you who won the election. The Syrians won the election. Asylum-seekers won the election. We don’t even know their numbers. There are young folks with chic haircuts in Kilis. For God’s sake, they are not asylum-seekers. The Afghans, too – I know that the Afghans receive special training in Konya.”
Having embraced the far-right discourse between the presidential election’s first and second rounds, the CHP chair was not just warning the Turkish people against “social explosion” and “security threats.” Instead, he disseminates that populist and exclusionary message to attack the government. By translating the general population’s problems with asylum-seekers into xenophobia, the opposition aligns its rhetoric with the far-right ZP’s discourse.
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