|
|
|
I N
T E R N A T I O N A L |
Havana.
June 13, 2013 |
|
|
|
Gezi Park highlights years of
destructive urban development
Jillian Kestler-D´Amours
FEW imagined that the symbolic act
of standing in front of bulldozers in Istanbul’s
Gezi Park in an effort to block a development
project near the city’s central square would have
caused the reaction it did.
|

Protesters
gather in Taksim Square
in Istanbul, not far from Gezi Park,
where protests were sparked against
the government's most recent
urban redevelopment project.
|
The recent defiant act – and the
Turkish police’s violent response – pushed thousands
of Turks out into streets across the country to
decry their government’s increasingly authoritarian
controls, lack of public accountability, police
violence and numerous urban development projects
that are irreversibly changing the face of the
country.
For many, the plans to uproot trees in Gezi Park are
just the latest in a long string of urban projects
that ignore the cultural and historic heritage of
Istanbul. More over, these projects are built at the
expense of the poor and fail to consider residents’
input.
"The poorer people are being driven out of the
centre of the city and pushed to the edges,"
explained Kevin Robins, an Istanbul-based urban
planning researcher. "On the other hand, [there is]
the taking over of more and more inner-city areas
for the young, affluent middle-class."
"The mixture…of classes that existed in Istanbul is
now being eroded quite dramatically," Robins told
IPS, describing the phenomenon as "polarisation".
"There’s a general feeling that there’s an attack on
the way of life," he added.
According to a report last year in The
Guardian, redevelopment projects are slated for
some 50 neighbourhoods in Istanbul, and in 2012
alone, 7.5 billion Turkish liras were allocated to
urban renewal across the city.
In the last week of May, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the
Turkish Prime Minister and head of the ruling
Justice and Development Party (AKP), unveiled his
controversial plan to build a third bridge – a
1,275-metre suspension bridge, with an expected
price tag of six billion dollars – across the
Bosphorus, linking the European and Asian sides of
Istanbul.
Opponents to the plan say the bridge will destroy
some of the only remaining green areas in the city
and have condemned the government’s lack of
consultation with local community groups.
Erdogan has also pushed for building a shipping
canal across the Bosphorus, calling it "a project of
such immense size that it can’t be compared to the
Panama or Suez canals." In May, the
government signed a contract to develop a third
airport in Istanbul, with a capacity of 150 million
passengers.
In recent years, residents of many Istanbul
neighbourhoods, especially those home to
impoverished minority groups, like the Tarlabaşı or
Sulukule areas, have also been pushed out to make
way for real estate developers and luxury housing
projects.
So-called gecekondu neighbourhoods –
unlicensed shantytowns established decades ago by
migrants from eastern Anatolia who moved to Istanbul
for work opportunities – are particularly vulnerable
to being displaced for the sake of development, with
the government and its agencies not only
confiscating land but also evicting and sometimes
relocating residents to the city’s outskirts.
According to political scientist Mine Eder, the
rapid pace at which the Turkish government has
launched these urban redevelopment projects is what
sets gentrification in Turkey apart from other
developing countries around the world.
"There’s a deliberate demolishing to create more
money, and really, to create this exclusionary zone
for the rich. There is a whole re-appropriation, re-definition,
and privatisation of the public space," explained
Eder, who teaches at Istanbul’s Boğaziçi University
and specialises in the impact of gentrification on
minority groups in Istanbul.
"[Erdogan's] vision is driven by this sort of
obsession with tourism and Istanbul becoming this
big, giant, commercial centre," Eder told IPS.
"That vision is behind that unquestionable bulldozer
construction. ‘Bulldozer neo-liberalism’ is a term
that sort of encapsulates the whole thing."
Nor is the government’s aggressive push for urban
development projects limited to Istanbul.
On the road leading from the airport to Turkey’s
capital city, Ankara, tall apartment blocks are
being erected on numerous hilltops, construction
cranes pepper the skyline, and huge billboards,
sponsored by the government’s housing authority,
TOKI, aim to entice potential homeowners.
"It’s happening everywhere. You see quite dramatic
changes going on in Anatolian cities now, making
them unrecognisable. Istanbul is clearly the
dominant focus, but Ankara also has huge expansions,
huge developments, and huge middle-class housing
areas," Robins said.
By 2023, the 100th anniversary of the founding of
the modern Turkish republic, Turkey hopes to be
among the top 10 economies of the world and reach a
gross domestic product (GDP) of two trillion dollars
and 500 billion dollars in exports annually.
According to Eder, the protests in Gezi Park signal
a historic moment in the reign of the current AKP
government, forming the strongest and most unified
opposition movement in recent years to these
unsustainable economic and urban development
projects.
"Until now, there was absolutely no one who could
actually sit, metaphorically, in front of that
bulldozer, and say you can’t go in here," she said.
"Now, they’ve done it." (IPS)
|
|
PRINT THIS ARTICLE |
|
|