Du 29 juin au 18 juillet, les enfants et adolescents auront l’opportunité de vivre une expérience exceptionnelle avec la Looney Tunes Colonie de Vacances, une activité conçue pour éveiller les esprits, développer les talents et créer des souvenirs inoubliables. Dans un environnement sécurisé, dynamique et rempli de joie, les participants âgés de 2 à 17 ans pourront apprendre tout en s’amusant à travers une multitude d’activités enrichissantes.
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Looney Tunes Colonie de Vacances : Le rendez-vous incontournable pour des vacances éducatives et amusantes !
CENTRAL ASIA REPORT
TURKISH WORLD NEWS: WORLDPRESS What’s happening in Turkey? Authoritarianism, resistance and a global war on democracy. In Turkey, the Erdoğan regime… Suspended democracy and the rule of law; an autocratic civilian coup From democracy to despotism: The Erdoğan way Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s journey from Istanbul mayor in the 1990s to Turkey’s most powerful presidency is a cautionary tale of how democratic institutions can turn inward to serve autocracy. Once a symbol of Islamist conservatism’s democratic aspirations, today, with the systematic erosion of the rule of law, press freedom and judicial independence, he serves as a stark example that elections alone do not guarantee democracy.
The arrest of Ekrem İmamoğlu on a range of charges, including corruption, terrorism and a diploma scandal, is a repeat of the regime’s strategy to neutralize opponents before they pose a threat. The same tactic was used against Selahattin Demirtaş, the imprisoned leader of the pro-Kurdish HDP. Journalists, professors, mayors – no one is immune from the law. State institutions have been emptied and turned into weapons of political survival.
Labeling political opponents as “terrorists” is no longer a scare tactic; it has become the regime’s default setting. The withdrawal of İmamoğlu’s diploma, a legal prerequisite for him to run for president, just days before the Republican People’s Party (CHP) primary on March 23, in which he was the sole and final candidate, is not a legal issue. This is an autocratic ploy, a direct bureaucratic coup against the ballot box.
Postmodern Coup: Turkey’s Reverse “February 28” What is happening in Turkey today bears an eerie resemblance to the “postmodern coup” of February 28, 1997; the only difference is that the generals have traded their military uniforms for capes and briefcases. At that time, Erdoğan’s mentor, Necmettin Erbakan, was overthrown by institutional pressure and elite coercion. Now Erdoğan seems to be using the same tools, this time to suppress his rivals. Social unrest and information blackout: the people’s fear The regime’s panic is palpable. Following İmamoğlu’s arrest, the government closed roads, banned demonstrations, and restricted access to X, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. These are not security measures, but an admission of fear. It is not the opposition that terrifies the regime, but the people.
And the people responded. Thousands took to the streets in the Sarachane district of Istanbul. Demonstrations erupted in major cities from Ankara’s METU to İzmir and Trabzon. The slogans were defiant, the atmosphere electric. They shouted: “The day will come when the AKP will be held accountable!” Even tear gas could not silence them. This is not just about İmamoğlu. This is about the right of the opposition, the sanctity of the vote, and the future of a republic that is currently in the grip of the ambitions of one man.
International Hypocrisy and the Mirror of Netanyahu
Turkey’s slide towards autocracy should shock the world, but it does not. Because Erdoğan is not the only one attacking democracy under the pretext of “security.”
Take Benjamin Netanyahu, for example. The brutal siege of Gaza, which some call “self-defense,” has reduced entire neighborhoods to rubble. Civilians, hospitals, and schools have been targeted in what many see as collective punishment or worse. Yet much of the West has remained silent or has made only moderate statements.
Ironically, Erdoğan is one of Netanyahu’s harshest critics. Yet he repeats the same rhetoric: all opposition is terrorism, all resistance is illegitimate, and all dissent is a national threat.
This double standard is incredibly frustrating. The same governments that condemn repression in Iran or Venezuela are largely silent about Turkey because they consider Erdoğan “strategically important.” But democracy does not care about geopolitics. It either matters or it does not. In Turkey, it does not.
The transformation of the PKK: hope or strategy?
Amidst this turmoil, an unexpected development has occurred: Abdullah Öcalan, the imprisoned leader of the outlawed PKK, has called for the organization to be disbanded. On paper, this is a huge change, a call to end a conflict that has claimed more than 40,000 lives since 1984. But in politics, timing is everything.
The move seems calculated. Analysts say Öcalan’s statement was not spontaneous, but likely followed secret negotiations with Ankara. The stage was set when Devlet Bahçeli, the leader of the far-right MHP (Nationalist Movement Party), signaled his support for Öcalan’s conditional release on the condition that the PKK disarm.
What does Erdoğan gain? Everything. Something he has long considered a nightmare.
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