On April 16 th , Turkish voters will go to the polls to cast their ballots in a referendum on whether to give (even more) extraordinary powers to their current president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Or at least that is the ostensible purpose of the plebiscite. But seen from a broader perspective, what the Turkish people will be voting on is democracy itself. The advances that Erdogan has made toward an autocratic takeover of political power in Turkey over the past three years have been dizzying. Toward the end of 2013, when he was still the country’s prime minister, it looked as if his political career might melt down and end in scandal, after a series of taped conversations appeared to leave no doubt that he and his son Bilal were involved in a vast (and personally lucrative) network of corruption. But clever and undeniably able politician that he is—with a career spanning two decades, from his days as mayor of Istanbul—and armed with the flourishing power that his profile as an ally...
Author Roberto Vivo comments on wars past and present, on the world’s great peacemakers and on the pathway to global peace. His basic philosophy: In a world where 9 out of every 10 victims of armed conflict are civilians, war is no longer a viable political alternative. Indeed, it is the ultimate crime against humanity. If rising generations are to have a future, the key will lie in world peace. War is the pathway to oblivion.