Foul play in Turkish banking

Beşiktaş, my beloved Black Eagles who are figuratively engraved in my heart and literally on my back, opened the new season with Champions League games late last month.

I arrived from China the morning of the preliminary round game with Feyenoord in Istanbul. I plan my travel schedule weeks in advance to be able to make it to as many home games as possible, but I had bought my China plane tickets at the end of April, so this was divine intervention. I watched the game in a bar off Ä°stiklal Street.

I flew from Istanbul to Dalaman on Aug. 18 even though Beşiktaş had a play-off game against Arsenal the next day. I could afford to stay in Istanbul for a couple of days more, but I do not have a season pass for the first time in almost a decade. I have chosen not to attend any games this year to protest the Turkish Football Federation’s (TFF) new e-ticketing system.

The TFF and the government had plans to implement a system that would keep a tab on spectators for a while, and they doubled their efforts during the summer of 2013, probably fearing the spread of Gezi protests to stadiums. Aktif Bank won a speedy auction in July 2013. Supreme Leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s son-in-law was the CEO of Çalık Group, Aktif’s parent, at the time.

The official agreement was signed in August 2013, following Gezi chants in the season openers of Istanbul giants Beşiktaş and Fenerbahçe, and the system was launched, rather meaningfully, in the derby between the two teams in April, which was boycotted by Beşiktaş supporter group Çarşı.

As a fan, I have questions about being tracked by the bank of a businessman very close to the government. But I am even more perplexed, as an...

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