JAMES M DORSEY: Turkish football executives campaigned this month for major constitutional change that would grant President Recep Tayyip Erdogan far-reaching executive powers.

The Turkish Football Federation’s (TFF) backing of Erdogan’s effort to accumulate more power put to bed any notion of a separation between politics and football.

So did the failure of world football body FIFA and UEFA, the European governing body, to condemn the TFF’s violation of a cardinal principle of international sports governance.

Speaking at a TFF conference, Erdogan punctured the fiction upheld by sports officials and politicians of a Chinese Wall that separates sports and politics.

Football man? Turkish President Erdogan

He said: “I believe politics and football share many common aspects at the core. Just like sports, the essence of politics is competition, race …

“Just as a team, playing without any plan, tactic or strategy, have zero chance of winning the cup, politicians, political parties that have nothing to tell the people have no chance of success.

“Just like football, politics cannot be done without passion, love and dedication. You have to dedicate yourself.”

Campaign strategy

If Erdogan set the ball rolling, TFF president Yildirim Demiroren, a businessman who built his fortune in liquid gas distribution, sealed the goal by campaigning for a vote in favour of enhancing the President’s power in a referendum scheduled for April 16.

Speaking at the same conference, Demiroren expressed the hope that Turkey would wake up on the morning of April 17 to discover that a majority of Turks had voted ‘Yes’.

Turkish football’s partisan alignment with politics with no sanctioning by international and regional sports associations responsible for policing maintenance of the fiction of separation of politics and sports goes however further than simple endorsements.

It involves sanctioning football officials, players, and club members for holding potentially dissenting political views.

Cumhurriyet, one of Turkey’s few remaining independent newspapers, reported last week that the TFF had suspended a referee in the Black Sea town of Sinop for publicly calling for a no vote in the referendum.

The referee, Ilker Sahin, charged that the TFF was applying double standards by de facto stipulating that campaigning in favour of a ‘Yes’ vote was legitimate, campaigning against was not.

Similarly, Istanbul’s Galatasaray, one of Turkey’s leading clubs, scrambled last week to expel two prominent former players, Hakan Suker and Arif Erdem, hours after sports and youth minister Akif Cagatay Kilic, took the club to task for not already having done so.

Galatasaray had voted a day earlier not to include Sukur, Turkey’s all-time top scorer, and Erdem in the expulsion of alleged followers of Fethullah Gulen, an exiled Muslim preacher, whom Erdogan blames for last year’s failed military coup.

Those expelled included former provincial governors and prosecutors.

UEFA Cup winners

Sukur and Erdem were members of the Galatasary squad who won the UEFA Cup in 2000. Sukur, like Gulen, has sought refuge in the United States from where both men condemned the failed military attempt to topple Erdogan.

A former recruiter for the Gulen movement, Said Alpsoy, who successfully focused on winning support for the preacher among Turkey’s top football stars said he had recruited half of Galatasaray’s team by the time he broke with the group in 2003.

US President Donald Trump’s short-lived national security advisor, Retired Army Lt. Gen. Mike Flynn, reportedly discussed with senior Turkish government officials – while in office – ways of extraditing Gulen to Turkey without going through the US  extradition legal process.

Kilic said: “Traitors to our country and our state have no business in our established sports clubs. The board’s voting is inexplicable to the families of our martyrs and veterans.”

Debt relief

Heavily indebted clubs such as Galatasary cannot afford to cross Erdogan who prides himself on having engineered financial relief for various clubs, partly through tax amnesties.

UEFA executive Andrea Traverso has noted that Turkey is the only member of the European association where debts and liabilities outstrip clubs’ assets.

Turkish football also owes Erdogan for protecting clubs from the potentially devastating fallout of the worst match-fixing scandal in Turkish history.

The scandal in 2011 was the first public skirmish between Erdogan and Gulen who, until then, had been allies, particularly in successfully asserting civilian control of the armed forces.

Aziz Yildirim, the head of Fenerbahce, the political crown jewel of Turkish football, who was at the core of the scandal, has accused Gulen’s followers of engineering the scandal.

Falling attendances

The financial troubles of Turkish clubs are aggravated by a severe drop in match attendance after the introduction of a mandatory electronic ticketing system in 2013.

Fans have boycotted the system in the belief that it was designed to identify them as part of a crackdown on popular, politicized fan groups.

Football fans played an important role in mass anti-Erdogan protests in 2013, the largest since Erdogan first became prime minister a decade earlier.

For his part, Erdogan outlawed Gulen’s Hizmet movement as a terrorist organization in the wake of the failed coup.

Critics of Erdogan have questioned his assertion and accused him of exploiting the coup to label most of his critics as Gulenists and act against them.

Evidential doubt

German intelligence chief Bruno Kahl told Der Spiegel earlier this month that Turkey had been unable to convince Germany of Gulen’s guilt.

Kahl said: “Turkey has tried to convince us on a number of different levels. But they haven’t yet been successful.”

Erdogan, a former football player, has sought to enhance his popularity in football-crazy Turkey in advance of the referendum by publicly identifying himself with the sport.

He was among the first to congratulate the Turkish national team on the pitch in Ankara for their defeat of Finland in a World Cup qualifier.

In doing so, Erdogan is in good company. Many world leaders see identification with a popular sports team as way to enhance their own popularity.

Congratulations are, however, a far cry from turning football into a willing political tool.

It raises questions about where the dividing line is in the alleged separation of sports and politics as well as about the integrity of international sports governance.

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Dr James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title, Comparative Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and three forthcoming books, Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa as well as Creating Frankenstein: The Saudi Export of Ultra-conservatism and China and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom.

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