P: //v_e
I'll be honest - I didn't actually understand your OP.//
The reason I mentioned Germany and the Netherlands, SP, is that both countries have significant Turkish populations. Everyone's heard of the German "guest workers", but the Netherlands had the same system in the '60s and '70s. Many of the Dutch Turks have dual nationality, and there's been a bit of a diplomatic row caused in part by Erdogan's "interference" in the recent Dutch elections (he advised Dutch Turks to vote for a new Dutch-Turkish party), and in part by the Dutch government's barring Turkish politicians from addressing the expatriate community in order to get support in the Turkish referendum on the extension of presidential powers.
So while what happens in Erdogan's Turkey may not be relevant to anyone in the UK it may well have some relevance to countries with significant populations of Turks or people of Turkish descent. The most obvious case (which should concern you) is the rise of attacks on homosexuals in places like Amsterdam (although in all the reports I've read these have always been attributed to Moroccan gangs rather than Turkish ones).
This phenomenon is discussed (and "explained") in the "LGBT-related attitudes" section of this Wiki article:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moroccan-Dutch