Turkey is making a big show of donating medical equipment to Europe and America while neglecting to combat the spread of coronavirus at home. |
Turkey’s pro-government media has been trying to spin the coronavirus as an Ankara victory for the last few months, even as the country’s official tally of cases rapidly increased to more than 50,000, making it the second worst outbreak in the Middle East after that of Iran. Just a month ago on March 8, Daily Sabah claimed that Turkey had special expertise in the fight against COVID-19 and the country was “virus-free.” It was not virus free, however – and the government’s attempt to pretend there were no cases have now come back to haunt it. Turkey put in place a two-day curfew over the weekend.
Turkey is an example of what happens when a country has almost no critical media; having muzzled or put in prison critical journalists over the last twenty years, the country’s media is dominated by state-run media or those connected to the ruling party. Ankara is among the largest jailor of journalists in the world according to Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect Journalists. There was little critical discussion of the government’s claims about the virus during key weeks in February and March when Ankara claimed the country was a model in the fight against the rising pandemic.
The number of COVID-19 cases in Turkey has more than tripled since the first of April.
Since the first of April the number of cases has risen from 15,000 to more than 52,000. Iran officially has 70,000 cases so it appears Turkey is on pace to have more cases than Iran in the next week. Turkey has more than 1,000 dead so far.
For Ankara’s leadership, which is used to creating nationalist causes and wars over the last years to distract the public from problems at home, the virus has proved a problem. Ankara is concerned about new bombing raids in Iraq, or sending more Syrian mercenaries to Libya, as it did in December, and does not want areas it occupies in northern Syria to become virus-hit or turn into a new conflict crisis.
How Ankara continues to try to distract from any criticism of its handling of the virus is to portray other countries as doing worse. It’s Anadolu media had twelve top stories on April 12, each of which focusing on failures of foreign countries. These included focus on India’s cases topping 8,000, Spain’s new deaths at 600, Iran having 4,500 deaths, and a focus on new cases in Russia, China, the US, Italy and France. For Turkey, the headlines were that there were less patients in intensive care and the army was handing out bread to the poor.
Turkey’s media is one of the least critical in the entire Middle East, with even less criticism of government policy than Iran’s media. This has helped keep Ankara insulated from any critique that its handling of the emerging threat may have been slow or non-existent. For instance, when Turkey’s regime ordered a sudden curfew over the weekend without informing mayors and locals, there was a massive rush as hundreds of thousands packed supermarkets. The rush of people is the opposite of what social distancing guidelines are intended to achieve. Istanbul municipality, the largest in the country, wasn’t even told beforehand about the government’s policy. Istanbul is led by an opposition party.
Turkish aid shipments were praised as “exemplary” by the World Health Organization.
Even as Turkey’s cases doubled every few days, the country’s leaders dispatched aid to the UK and other countries, hoping to get headlines from what looked like boxes of aid sent abroad while people at home were being infected. According to one list, Turkey sent aid to the UK, Spain, Italy, the US, several Balkan states, Tunisia, Libya and even sought to send aid to Israel and the Palestinians. The aid shipments received praise from the World Health Organization as “exemplary.”
WHO head Tedros Ghebreyesus joined Turkey’s leader alongside those of other Central Asia countries including Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan as well as Azerbaijan on Friday. The countries said they were cooperating in the battle against the virus. WHO CEO for Health Emergencies Mike Ryan was quoted by Turkish state media as claiming there was “no better country on the European continent, better prepared, to deal with natural disasters” than Turkey.
Mike Ryan, director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Programme, declared that Turkey is “better prepared to deal with natural disasters” than any other country in Europe. |
Oddly, the WHO also mentioned the millions of refugees, mostly Syrians, in Turkey at the moment and urged support for Turkey. It was unclear why Turkey had sent support abroad if the WHO was also asking for the international community to send support to Turkey for the refugees, the very same refugees Turkey could have sent support to rather than sending it abroad.
According to TRT, Turkey has sent respirators to the Balkans, 500,000 test kits to the US, and hundreds of thousands of masks to various countries. Some of the countries that received the medical equipment have fewer COVID-19 cases than Turkey. No explanation was given as to why Turkey sent test kits to the US but not to areas it occupies in northern Syria, much closer to home. Turkey’s health care diplomacy, at a time when its own population needs testing and areas it occupies in Syria are vulnerable, may have more to do with getting positive headlines. ...
As Turkey now is providing face masks to the public and trying to quarantine more than 135,000 people, according to Turkish media, it is unclear if the country can continue to provide aid to dozens of countries. It is also unclear if and when there will be questions about what will happen to the millions of refugees in Turkey and Turkish-occupied areas of Syria amid the pandemic. The health care diplomacy may have been designed to make sure those areas get aid from the countries Turkey sent aid to, as a way to mobilize solidarity in the months to come as the pandemic continues. For now, Ankara must try to find a way to flatten its curve of infections or it will become the country with the largest number of cases in the Middle East. ...
Seth Frantzman, a Middle East Forum writing fellow, is the author of After ISIS: America, Iran and the Struggle for the Middle East (2019), op-ed editor of The Jerusalem Post, and founder of the Middle East Center for Reporting & Analysis.