"We Are All Turkish Democrats": a Statement of Solidarity with the Turkish
Struggle
Abahlali baseMjondolo is a democratic, membership based movement of shack dwellers and other poor people in South
Africa. In 2005 our experience of suffering and injustice led us to decided to organize ourselves and to represent
ourselves. We are struggling for land and housing as a vital step towards the restoration of our dignity and the
recognition of our equality. We have been severely punished by those who want to keep us in our place and we have faced
serious repression.
When we have come under attack we have received solidarity from across the world – from Auckland to Istanbul, Nairobi,
London and New York. We have stood with comrades facing repression in places like Haiti and Palestine. Today we stand
with our comrades in Turkey and with all Turkish democrats.
We keep over movement strong by making sure that it always remains in the hands of its members and that we take forward
the struggles that affect people’s everyday lives. We call this a living politics. But we take very seriously the fact
that the system that has marginalized and oppressed us here in South Africa is the very system that marginalizes and
oppresses the people of Turkey. And we have not forgotten that the first people to be in solidarity with our struggle
outside of South Africa were the comrades at Sendika and People’s House in Turkey.
Your dignity is our dignity. The politicians and their police who vandalize your dignity vandalize our dignity. In South
Africa as in Turkey it is clear that we will not have dignity or peace until there is a fair and equal distribution of
land, wealth and power. We stand with you. We struggle with people and not for people and so we will be guided by you as
to how we can be most effective in finding ways to build a living solidarity with your struggle.
We have studied the statements from our Turkish colleagues carefully. We condemn Prime Minister Erdogan and his
government’s attack on people who are trying to voice out their democratic reactions and demands in the city squares. We
condemn his attack on you with despotic measures including tear gas, water cannons, beatings, shootings and threats of
civil war. Such attacks are not just undemocratic. They are criminal.
We call upon Prime Minister Erdgan and his Turkish government to stop waging war on democrats and democratic formations.
We call on all progressive movements around the world to stand in solidarity with the Turkish struggle.
We also call upon the South African government to remember how the world stood in solidarity with the struggle against
apartheid in its darkest days. We call upon our government to put justice before self-interest, to stop disgracing the
memory of our struggle by supporting oppressors and to offer its full support to the struggling people of Turkey.
The undemocratic and brutal practices of the apartheid regime in South Africa gave rise to the popular mobilization that
gave birth to our democracy. The growing brutality of the post-apartheid regime is giving birth to new struggles in the
shacks, on the mines and on the farms. We wish to warn that the anger of the poor can go in many directions. We wish to
remind all oppressed people, and their oppressors, that once the oppressed realise how much power is in their hands the
world can be changed from below. We must never allow our oppressors to divide us. Our power comes from our own
recognition of our humanity and the unity that we build on that foundation.
The Turkish Embassy is in Pretoria and we are in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape. However we will send this letter to
our Turkish comrades assuring them of our support for their struggle. We will send it to the Turkish Embassy in Pretoria
too. And we will be holding a picket in front of the Durban City Hall in solidarity with Turkish people.
ENDS