L eading up to the the most bizarre and unsuccessful coup attempt in Turkey's history, Recep Tayyip Erdogan had been choking out the civil liberties of his citizens, punishing journalists and threatening the country's top constitutional court. Erdogan has taken Turkey further from secularism and closer to Islamic theocracy, which is claimed to be one of the reasons behind the attempted coup. He somehow convinced Germany to punish a writer for reciting a negative poem and has imprisoned journalists in his own country for their negative criticisms of his increasingly authoritarian rule. It is suspiciously obvious that the recent failed coup attempt has given Erdogan the excuse to stamp out opponents within the Turkish military, Turkish courts, Turkish media and even Turkish schools. Despite his slow movement toward Islamic autocracy, the Obama administration and Hillary Clinton have encouraged Erdogan's continued reign over all branches of the Turkish government.





The day after the coup attempt, media began reporting the obvious. Erdogan's popularity was “soaring” and his government had arrested more than 2,800 people, including judges, generals, soldiers and activists within the first day. Anyone who thought there was an inkling of hope for free press in Turkey also had their hopes shattered with the arrest of 42 journalists just two weeks following the coup attempt. The attempted coup had done more good for Erdogan than harm, allowing him to tighten his grip by eradicating the culprits – or anyone he deemed a culprit.





“Those who hope that the aftermath of the coup, which has left hundreds dead, thousands arrested and untold damage on the country’s infrastructure and psyche, will lead to greater democracy and openness will be bitterly disappointed. If anything, the aftermath of the coup will see greater authoritarianism and attacks against Erdogan’s critics.” – Haaretz, July 17, 2016





None of this should come as a surprise to anyone. Recep Erdogan has been building an Islamic autocracy since he was elected in 2003 as Turkey's Prime Minister. After he was elected President in 2014, he started to take his authoritarian ambitions to the next level. To date, since the attempted coup, Erdogan has targetted more than 50,000 people.





E lection Fraud

The most innocent aspect of Erdogan's 2014 campaign was his campaign logo, which had a striking resemblance to the Obama campaign's logo.



Beyond the logo, Erdogan's campaign and the entire Turkish presidential election were fraught with allegations of electoral fraud, corruption, intimidation and media bias. Although no evidence surfaced during the scrutineering efforts of Turkish citizens during the presidential election, the country's localized elections in the same year were riddled with evidence of fraud, and Erdogan's government, under his leadership as Prime Minister, developed a newly implemented vote counting system that was criticized as being too vulnerable to manipulation.

In Turkey's 2014 local elections, there were widespread reports of intimidation and documented instances of voter fraud. What's more startling is the fact that several Turkish news links that covered some cases of documented fraud have since vanished. These dead links once contained stories that documented voter fraud in Turkey: Turk Solu, Gazetecileronline.

Other news sources, such as Al Jazeera Turk, have covered the allegations of fraud as well. Translated Turkish news stories can still be read here and here.

On election night, Turkey was also plagued by bizarre power outages that forced vote counters to count ballots in the dark, under candle light. When confronted to give an excuse for the power outages, Turkey's Energy Minister, Taner Yildiz, blamed it on a cat. Sophia Jones, a reporter for The World Post, wrote the following:





“The statement prompted widespread ridicule and anger among Turks who are increasingly at odds with controversial Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling party. The local elections were widely seen as a referendum on Erdogan’s 11-year rule, and the party emerged victorious despite months of anti-government protests and a dramatic corruption scandal that appeared to implicate Erdogan in fraud. Many Turks are skeptical about the power outages that occurred in major city centers, with some people alleging that the government tampered with vote counting.”





Among the power outages and allegations of fraud, reports of violence at some polling stations also emerged following the elections. Voters reported being intimidated, harassed and even punched by supporters of Erdogan's “Justice And Development Party”, or AKP.

Since the coup attempt, supporters of Erdogan – inside and outside political circles – have defended him with claims that he was “democratically elected”. Obviously, that fact is questionable at best.





A bsolute Corruption

Not too long ago, in 2014, a series of leaked audio recordings went viral in Turkey. What was in some of those recordings stunned Turkey and the international community. The recordings contained professionally verified phone conversations between Erdogan and his son discussing ways to hide illegally obtained money. A video of the Turkish recordings, along with translations, can be accessed here.

After the recordings made their rounds, Erdogan acknowledged that his phone had been tapped, but claimed the recordings were fabricated by splicing together different conversations. More than one expert, including an American named Josh Marpet, verified the authenticity of the recordings and claimed that if they were indeed fake, they were faked with a level of sophistication “not yet seen”.

At the time, Erdogan was Prime Minister and his AKP were in full control of the Turkish parliament. So, of course, a crackdown on social media ensued.

On March 28, 2014, CNN reported the following:





“The Turkish government banned YouTube on Thursday, less than a week after Ankara made a similar blackout of the social networking site Twitter, which is estimated to have more than 10 million Turkish users. Neither website can be reached on Turkish internet networks. The crackdown comes just days before Turks are expected to go to the polls in nationwide municipal elections. The Turkish government said its YouTube block came as a response to the leak of a conversation between top government officials purportedly discussing the possibility of going to war with neighboring Syria.”





Before this, several members of Erdogan's AKP had been implicated in a massive, wide reaching corruption scandal. Following several arrests and resignations over proven cases of fraud, bribery and money laundering, Erdogan blamed the entire investigation and its outcomes on an “international conspiracy” involving Israel and Fethullah Gulen. Erdogan forced some resignations inside his cabinet to clean up the mess, but refused to resign himself. Turkey's Minister Of Environment, Erdogan Bayraktar, claimed that Recep Erdogan had approved of everything that was done and should also resign. But, Recep Erdogan refused to resign and remained in power as Prime Minister following the scandal.