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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Kurdish club becomes political football as it chases Turkish cup dream
Third division Amedspor's run to the cup quarter-final has been hit by player and fan bans, and police raids for alleged 'ideological propaganda'
The club from Turkey's largest Kurdish city, Diyarbakir, have dispatched two top division sides on their run to a last-eight tie with the giants of Fenerbahce on 9 February (AA)

Suraj Sharma-Monday 8 February 2016
Third division Amedspor's run to the cup quarter-final has been hit by player and fan bans, and police raids for alleged 'ideological propaganda'
The club from Turkey's largest Kurdish city, Diyarbakir, have dispatched two top division sides on their run to a last-eight tie with the giants of Fenerbahce on 9 February (AA)

ISTANBUL, Turkey – They
have booked themselves into the Turkish football cup's quarter-final
with an inspiring run. But the third-tier club Amedspor have found to
their cost that in Turkey, sport and politics are seldom separate.
The unfashionable club from Turkey's largest Kurdish city, Diyarbakir,
have dispatched two top division sides on their run to a last-eight tie
with the giants of Fenerbahce on 9 February. But this success appears to
have come at a cost.
Amedspor's officials allege the success has led to scores of supporters
being arrested, a raid on the club's premises by counter-terrorism
units, supporters being banned from the home leg of the Fenerbahce tie,
and an unheard of 12-match ban on a key player for "politically
motivated ideological propaganda".
The club's cup run comes as the Turkish-Kurdish conflict has flared
after a three-year peace plan fell through last July. In recent months,
cities in Turkey's southeast have become battlegrounds once again as the
Turkish army fights the banned Kurdish PKK.
Amedspor's chairman, Ali Karakas, believes the club is being
discriminated against politically and racially, simply because
authorities find Kurdish success hard to stomach.
"We train every day surrounded by the sounds of tank and artillery
shelling. These raids are not going to intimidate or demoralise
us," Karakas told Middle East Eye. "But what we are facing is pure and
simple racial discrimination and we will resort to every legal means
available to seek justice."
Karakas said the club had been under the cosh at the start of the
season, but the intimidation got worse because of their giant-killing
acts in the cup. In January, the club's premises were raided by
anti-terrorism police after a fan-run Twitter account dedicated the cup
victory over top-tier Bursaspor to the Kurdish "guerrilla fighters" in
Sur and Cizre.
"Why send a team of 40 counter-terrorism officers to investigate the
source of a tweet? They could have just traced the IP address remotely
or even just sent a few officers in plainclothes, who we would have
gladly helped," Karakas said. "It is all just a ruse to intimidate us."
The Turkish Football Federation banned Amedspor supporters from the home
leg with Fenerbahce for using chants and slogans at a cup tie
against Medipol Basaksehir in Istanbul including "the resistance is
everywhere".
Almost 100 supporters were also arrested.
Then, midfielder Deniz Naki was banned for 12 games by the TFF for
"ideological propaganda" after using social media to dedicate
the Bursaspor win to Kurds killed in the government crackdown. He signed
off in Kurdish "Her biji azadi", or "Long live freedom."
Karakas has appealed against the decisions and says the club will take
the matters to European football's governing body, UEFA, if their
domestic appeals fail.
UEFA and FIFA, football's global governing body, both have clear statutes about political interference in football and racism.
In extreme cases, a country's federation can be suspended and its
national team barred from international competition for political
interference.
Cetin Cem Yilmaz, a Turkish sports analyst, said he could not remember a
12-match ban ever being handed out for "conducting ideological
propaganda". However, stadium bans for fan behaviour are more common in
Turkish football.
He said he did not think a charge of political interference against
the TFF would stick. Although UEFA takes a tough line against racism, it
is usually clubs and their fans that are reported, rarely national
football federations – particularly for domestic games.
"It is not a secret that Turkish football is highly politicised, but I
doubt the scale of this particular incident is enough to bring about
a UEFA ban for Turkey's football federation or put the national team's
participation in Euro 2016 at risk," Yilmaz told MEE.
"I believe of more pressing concern is Amedspor being able to get the
stadium and player ban overturned in time for their quarter-final tie to
give them a slightly better chance," he said.
Bilal Akkulu, a founder of the fan group Amedspor Barikat, was among supporters arrested after the Medipol game in Istanbul.
"We were arrested, taken away; some were mistreated by the police and
even forced to sing the Turkish national anthem while being constantly
abused," he told MEE.
He said the club's fans, players and staff face the vilest abuse at most away games.
"We are treated like mortal enemies at almost every away game and the
worst abuse is hurled at us, but what happened at the Istanbul game was a
new low."
A representative from the Basaksehir supporters group, 1453, however had
a different view, saying that Amedspor's supporters had insulted
national values.
"If any Amed supporters acted out of line, then our police forces did what was required and we fully support that," he said.
"We as a group, however, don't believe that all Amedspor supporters
should be viewed as PKK sympathisers and also don't believe in mixing
politics and football.
"But this issue [the conflict in the southeast] is above politics and
something we will not negotiate on. We will respect all visiting teams
and their fans as long as they respect our religion, flag and nation,"
he said.
Despite already facing steep odds, Amedspor will now face
a Fenerbahce side - containing world-class players such as former
Manchester United stars Robin Van Persie and Nani – deprived of their
supporters and without a key player.
But none of this will dampen the optimism with which its fans approach their team's games.
"Whatever
the circumstances, we will back our team to the full. Our team's success
at least brings a little joy to our beleaguered people," said Akkulu.
"We are going to win the cup."
