VICE (2013) s05e18 Episode Script

Power to the President

1 Shane Smith: This week on Vice: the historic vote in Turkey that could change the face of Europe.
(crowd chanting in foreign language) Safak Pavey: This is a proposal to turn Turkey into Wahhabist's version of North Korea.
This is what we are fearing.
(crowd chanting) Yeung: It's the day before the referendum here in Istanbul, and President Erdogan is holding several rallies.
(speaking foreign language) (cheering) (theme music playing) Yeung: Go, go, go! Refugee: We are not animals! Last summer, television cameras from around the world were transfixed by a dramatic coup in Turkey.
An attempted coup in Turkey.
The military claiming it has seized power from Turkey's president.
The president says the coup has failed.
Newsman: We're watching people right now pouring into the streets after this military coup.
Smith: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan used the passions and political tensions to push through a referendum that granted him sweeping new powers and moved Turkey's democracy closer to dictatorship.
(speaks foreign language) (crowd shouts) Turkey is a crucial American ally and a longtime member of NATO, but now, Erdogan's victory in April is shaking old alliances with the West.
So, we sent Isobel Yeung to Istanbul to witness this historic vote.
(people cheering, chanting) Everyone's outside, celebrating jubilantly.
This right here is President Erdogan's home, and people have gathered in their thousands to congratulate each other and to celebrate the results, despite the tight margin.
(crowd chanting in foreign language) (speaks foreign language) (cheering) (crowd chanting) Yeung: Turkey's historic referendum has the potential to be a major turning point in the future of global politics.
With the fall of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, Turkey was established as a republic, long known for secularism and democracy.
But those principles have slowly been eroded under the leadership of President Erdogan.
(crowd shouting) He's built a cult of personality stemming from years of economic booms defending Islamic values, and defying Turkey's international rivals.
(helicopter whupping) After serving the maximum three terms as prime minister, Erdogan was elected president in 2014.
(crowd chanting) Yeung: A role which, until now, has largely been ceremonial.
With this vote, Erdogan is effectively rewriting the constitution.
There will no longer be a prime minister, the president assumes broad control of the judiciary, can rule by decree, and could remain in power until 2034, which critics fear will cement his one-man rule.
(speaks foreign language) (crowd cheering) Yeung: We followed the run-up to this highly-divisive vote to understand why a key American ally is pulling away from democracy.
That journey began in Washington, D.
C.
We're at Washington Dulles Airport, and these guys that just pulled up here are Turkish delegates who have arrived with thousands of ballot papers that they've been collecting over the last few weeks in preparation for the referendum.
Turkish citizens all around the world rallied for this historic referendum, convinced that the future of the country hung in the balance.
As tensions mounted, Turkish relations with the EU hit a new low.
Here in the US, we traveled with delegates from each side.
Omer supports a "Yes" vote, while Yurter is from the opposing party.
Three million Turkish diaspora, that's pretty significant.
These votes could make a real difference.
Yeah, it changes about three percent of total votes.
Why should the world care, in general, what happens in Turkey? Number one, Turkey is a NATO member.
Number two, Turkey is the only secular and democratic country with a predominantly Muslim population.
And number three, because of its geostrategic location.
Yeung: Turkey is the gateway between Europe and the Middle East.
It's home to over three million Syrian refugees more than any other nation.
And a recent string of terrorist attacks by ISIS and Kurdish insurgents have further destabilized the country, garnering support for Erdogan's strongman rule.
In the world's most volatile region, Turkey is a vital Western ally, maintaining the second-largest military in NATO.
But factions of that military shocked the world in July 2016, with an attempt to overthrow President Erdogan.
(speaks on phone) (speaks foreign language) Yeung: As the coup plotters took to the streets, President Erdogan spoke to journalist Hande Firat.
Maybe you can just give us an account of what happened that night.
(speaks foreign language) (people shout) (Firat continues speaking) (helicopter whupping) (gunfire) (Erdogan speaking on phone) (crowd chanting) Yeung: Galvanized by Erdogan's call to arms, crowds of people confronted the coup plotters on Istanbul's Bosphorus Bridge.
Melih Ecertas, leader of the AK Party Youth Branch, was there to fight for what he saw as a pivotal moment for Erdogan.
There were four tanks.
There were maybe 60 soldiers with rifles The people were walking down to here (gunfire) protesting.
The soldiers were shooting.
(gunfire) Yeung: So, you saw several people die.
I saw several people martyred, so we feel this is a battlefield.
The police officers throughout the country just start shooting with them.
After half an hour, the soldiers, they are giving up.
And then the people are screaming, "We got the Bosphorus Bridge.
" At the end of the night, 50 people were killed in here.
In all Turkey, around 250 people were killed.
Yeung: Support for Erdogan surged after the coup and emboldened him to crack down on those responsible.
He began by arresting followers of Islamist cleric Fethullah Gulen, his former ally, now living in exile in Pennsylvania.
But critics claim Erdogan has since used the state of emergency as a chance to purge all opposition.
Meanwhile, supporters like Mileh are tirelessly campaigning for a "Yes" vote to expand Erdogan's powers.
Obviously, you've spoken to so many people over the last few weeks in your campaigning.
What are the biggest issues they have with constitutional change? They would like to understand the basic change, and we will start telling them, "We need a strong Turkey.
We need a strong judiciary system.
" They start understand.
Yeung: In total, across Turkey, how many volunteers do you have? Wow.
Thanks to a strong parliamentary backing, the "Yes" campaign draws on significant funding and state resources.
(Mileh speaking foreign language) Yeung: You all are? If I see Erdogan, I'll tell him he has a very big fan base here.
(speaks English) (both laugh) (applause, whistling) Yeung: The AK Party Youth Branch has held 7,000 of these "Yes" campaign events in the 45 days leading up to the referendum.
(group chanting in foreign language) Yeung: Right now, they're playing on the screens scenes from July 15th of the attempted coup.
(people shout) Yeung: It's a very strong reaction as soon as anyone from the opposition comes on the screen.
(cheering) (crowd chanting) (Mileh speaking foreign language) Yeung: There was a clear momentum behind the "Yes" campaign.
In part, that's because critics have largely been silenced in the post-coup purge.
Over 110,000 people have been detained, accused of being Gulenists or enemies of the state.
Police officers, civil servants, and journalists have been sacked.
And in academia, tens of thousands of teachers and professors have been dismissed, but some of those professors are attempting to fight back by taking their classes underground.
(speaking foreign language) Yeung: Many of these professors formerly taught at Ankara University.
How long have you been working in academia? (speaking foreign language) Are you saying that none of the professors who were dismissed were in any way linked to the Gulenist movement? Yeung: What do you think this means for the future of Turkey? Yeung: And it's not just academia that's under attack.
Lawyers and judges who are seen as sympathetic to detainees have also been targeted.
A group of lawyers are staging weekly protests against the arrests of their colleagues.
One of them agreed to speak with us.
(speaks foreign language) (clamoring) As a lawyer, do you feel like the current judiciary system in Turkey will provide justice? Yeung: The deterioration of the rule of law has fueled opposition to Erdogan's proposed constitutional changes.
Groups like this one are campaigning for "No," "Hayir" in Turkish.
(woman speaks foreign language) (mutters) (mutters) We're with the "No" campaigners as they're handing out leaflets as well.
Slightly more mellow campaign than it was when we were with the AKP guys.
Woman: It's really divided.
You can see the difference.
Like, when you're in Kadikoy or here, it seems, like, great, and you feel more confident, and then, like, in just 20 minutes, everything changed.
You're in a conservative neighborhood, and you can feel just the opposite.
Yeah, it does feel very divided.
(crowd chanting) It feels very, very different.
Yeah, it is like Turkish community is so divided now.
(woman speaking English) (rock music playing) (Yeung speaks) (woman speaks) (man shouts) Tensions are running very high by the looks of things.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
What are the main reasons that you're campaigning for "No"? This is scary.
I mean, as a woman, especially, I really don't want to live in a religious country.
We know this from other, like, Middle Eastern countries.
If there is a "Yes" vote, what does Turkey look like in 10, 20 years time? Some people talks about civil war.
And yeah, there's no good scenario at all.
We will have, obviously, a dictatorship with "Yes.
" Why is it, do you think, that so many people are voting for "Yes"? Turkish people feel like they're alone, and, like, Europe hates them, like-- I don't know-- America hates them, everybody hates them.
Yeung: That popular belief stems in part from 30 years of being denied entry to the EU, which many believe is rooted in Islamophobia.
(speaks foreign language) (cheering) Yeung: Widespread disappointment at this rejection has helped garner nationalist views that have only deepened the polarization within society.
I was attacked by 15 members of parliament, who were female members, with screwdrivers and scissors in their hands.
Yeung: For the past six years, Safak Pavey has served as a parliamentary member for Turkey's main opposition party.
Anyone who is a non-supporter for them, is gonna be facing imprisonment, social lynching.
This is a proposal to turn Turkey into Wahhabist's version of North Korea, so this is what we're fearing.
President Erdogan is incredibly popular.
I see his image everywhere.
A lot of people that I've spoken to have sung his praises and have said that Turkey has transformed under his leadership and that economic transformation, financial transformation, infrastructure's being built under his leadership, which wasn't built under the CHP's leadership.
Um, no.
I-- I have to say that this is part of their propaganda.
Government controlled media is about 99 percent of Turkish media right now, so there's almost no space allowed for our messages.
But the biggest power that they have is the religious populism.
I mean, just this week, Erdogan has declared that those citizens that vote for "No," they will lose their place in heaven.
(speaking foreign language) (man praying in Arabic on PA) Yeung: In Turkey, the mosques are directly answerable to the state, meaning the government can easily reach the congregation of millions of people a week.
(man continues praying) What sort of role do you think that religion plays here in Turkey? (speaking foreign language) Why is it that you weren't able to go to school with your headscarf before AK Party came to power? (speaking foreign language) Is there anything about Turkey you think that, uh people in the West, people in America might not understand? (laughs) Yeung: That sentiment, that Erdogan is the reason for Turkey's strength, is echoed by huge swaths of the population.
It's the day before the referendum here in Istanbul, and President Erdogan is holding several rallies throughout the city.
They're expecting hundreds of thousands of people to be attending and to be rallying and campaigning for the "Yes" vote.
In the height of this frenzied atmosphere, we finally caught a glimpse of the man at the center of this divisive vote.
(man speaks on PA) (crowd shouting, clapping) (cheering) (cheering) (Erdogan speaks) (crowd shouts) (Erdogan speaks) (crowd shouts) (Erdogan speaks) (crowd shouts) Yeung: With the "Yes" campaign at a fever pitch, it was finally the day of the referendum.
A massive 85 percent of the population turned out to vote.
We went to a "No" campaign HQ, where what played out over the next few hours would determine the direction of Turkey's entire future.
(all greeting in foreign language) (speaking foreign language) (speaks foreign language) (people chattering) (chattering continues) Yeung: The atmosphere here is getting more and more subdued as all the votes are coming in.
Almost all of them have been counted now, and it's standing at about 52 percent "Yes" and 48 percent "No.
" It's not the result that these guys are hoping for.
In spite of the significant advantages afforded to the "Yes" campaign, the vote was nearly split, signifying just how deeply divided the country really is.
(speaking foreign language) (crowd cheering) Do you see this as a turning point in Turkey's history? (speaks English) Yeung: We've heard that there is Erdogan supporters out on the streets already, so we're heading towards President Erdogan's house, to see what's going on down there.
How are you feeling tonight? (speaks foreign language) (shouting in Arabic) What do you think this means to the rest of the world? (speaks foreign language) Yeung: While Erdogan supporters celebrated their victory against the world, international monitors slammed the validity of the referendum itself.
Newswoman: They don't believe this referendum was fair.
Newsman: The State Department acknowledged the concerns the international monitors raised.
The 16th April constitutional referendum took place on an unlevel playing field.
Yeung: To understand how the country can move forward, we sat down with Deputy Prime Minister Veysi Kaynak.
There are widespread protests throughout the country.
Can you understand why almost half the population feels deeply concerned that Turkey is now on a path to one-man rule? (speaks foreign language) I have to bring it to you that not only opposition groups, but also international monitors around the world have said that that these results are heavily, heavily contested.
How do you plan to reconcile those issues? It seems like there's a real distrust of media in Turkey, including foreign media.
Why do you think it is that Turkey struggles so much with freedom of press? Turkey has locked up more journalists than anywhere else in the world.
Obviously, freedom of press is an issue here.
(speaks foreign language) What happens to your role now that, under this new system, the prime minister's position is obsolete? Presumably the deputy prime minister's position is also obsolete.
Have you done yourself out of a job? (laughs) (crowd cheering) Yeung: But whether this transfer of power to Erdogan actually brings more stability remains to be seen.
Since the referendum, Germany has moved to withdraw its troops from a NATO airbase in Turkey, and Erdogan's own bodyguards violently attacked protesters on an official D.
C.
visit.
(shouting) In Turkey, the state of emergency was extended once again and thousands more have been fired and detained.
We followed as protesters took to the streets.
(crowd shouting) (speaks foreign language) (crowd shouting) It's not just even Middle East or Islam.
The whole world is going to be more and more conservative, populist, religious, as you can see even in the US for example.
(crowd shouts) Pavey: We do know how vital our struggle is to keep modernity alive in Turkey.
This is our struggle's name, and it has global consequences, whether we can survive out of this or not.
(crowd shouts)
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