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ANKARA 2006 spent in "what's up next year" discussion

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  • ANKARA 2006 spent in "what's up next year" discussion

    Turkish Daily News
    December 30, 2006 Saturday

    2006 A YEAR SPENT IN 'WHAT'S UP NEXT YEAR' DISCUSSION


    Even during the closing days of 2006, everyone was constantly
    preoccupied with debate and controversy over the twin elections to be
    held in 2007. Nothing could stand alone to be discussed, somehow a
    correlation was established between each and every development and
    the upcoming presidential elections in April or the parliamentary
    elections currently scheduled for Nov. 4.

    The debate was so intense and destructive that fearing a possible
    political backlash, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    government could not adequately celebrate the first-ever Nobel Prize
    in Literature win by a Turk, writer Orhan Pamuk, amid claims that the
    award was given to him not because of his literary success but rather
    for a controversial remark he made regarding the Armenian genocide
    allegations.

    The tension between the AKP government and the secularist opposition
    -- including not only political opponents but also the
    military-civilian conservative establishment -- dominated the entire
    year.

    A decision by the Council of State's Second Department stressing that
    a teacher wearing the Islamist-style headscarf to and from school
    could not be the director of a state-owned kindergarten stirred up
    the secularism debate. An attack on the same department of the
    Council of State by an Islamist-nationalist lawyer Alparslan Arslan
    -- a member of the Istanbul bar -- resulted in the death of Judge
    Mustafa Birden, while three members of the court were seriously
    wounded. Arslan was subsequently captured by the police. The event
    sparked a major confrontation between the AKP government and the
    secular judiciary.

    The funeral for slain judge Birden became an anti-Islamist
    demonstration by secularists. Together with the top brass of the
    military and the judicial bureaucracy, former Prime Minister Bulent
    Ecevit attended the funeral. That night Ecevit suffered a stroke and
    was hospitalized. Five months later the veteran politician died. His
    funeral too was marked by a massive anti-Islamist demonstration, with
    tens of thousands of people chanting "Turkey is secular and will stay
    so... Its presidency is secular and will stay so."

    Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, whose appointment as top commander was
    announced a day before the National Security Council (MGK) convened,
    contrary to custom -- after months of speculation that the government
    was trying to avoid him succeeding outgoing Gen. Hilmi Ozkok -- was a
    development that also reflected the delicate secularist-AKP divide in
    the country. Buyukanit and the entire new chain of command, together
    with thousands of senior and junior commanders and military cadets,
    participated in the entire funeral procession of Ecevit, except the
    section at Parliament where Parliamentary Speaker Bulent Arinc had
    not wanted a military ceremony.

    The Buyukanit sensitivity was partly fallout from an indictment
    prepared by Van regional prosecutor Ferhat Sarikaya on the November
    2005 blast at southeastern border down of Semdinli. In the
    indictment, the prosecutor had implicated the top general, who was
    Land Forces commander at the time, in "gang activity." Eventually the
    prosecutor was disbarred from the profession and the charges against
    Buyukanit were all dropped. However, the development was considered
    by many as an effort by the ruling AKP to discredit Buyukanit and
    prevent him from becoming chief of General Staff.

    Indeed, the renewed secularism debate was a result of a speech made
    by Buyukanit immediately after he took up his role heading the
    General Staff, in which he warned of a rising threat against the
    secular principles of the republic.

    The same day of Ecevit's funeral and its associated massive show in
    support of secularism, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdog?an, already
    upset with pressures from the conservative and hard-core secularist
    power centers of Turkey to agree to a "consensus candidate" for the
    presidency, was not only getting his presidency endorsed by the
    delegates of the AKP convention but at the same time tacitly
    demonstrating to the grassroots of his party that he has chosen
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as his successor as head of the party.

    However, Erdog?an stirred up even a bigger controversy when he
    branded people at the funeral chanting "Turkey is secular" as being
    like "fans at a soccer match."

    The huge turnout at Ecevit's funeral and the reported political will
    of the former nationalist-left leader for the establishment of a
    "unity of forces loyal to founding principles of the republic" to
    form a strong political alternative to the AKP gave way to futile
    efforts to forge a new left-right political alliance.

    The drive by Bulent Ecevit's wife, Rahsan Ecevit, which started with
    a call on Ecevit's arch political foe Suleyman Demirel, eventually
    died out when the main-opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
    insisted that any unity must be achieved under its roof.

    Efforts to forge unity in the center-right picked up momentum after
    the corruption charges against former Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz
    were deferred -- under the terms of the partial amnesty that was
    legislated by the previous three-way Ecevit government in which
    Yilmaz was a deputy premier -- but also failed to produce any
    tangible results.

    Even Turkey's European Union accession bid, the fight against
    separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) terrorism and the prime
    minister fainting in his car were all exploited throughout the year
    as tools to force the AKP to relinquish its right -- as the majority
    party in Parliament -- on nominating and electing the next president.

    Though with his ambiguous "Rather than fighting on the mountain, they
    (the PKK) should come down and engage in politics" statement True
    Path Party (DYP) leader Mehmet Ag?ar helped his party gain some
    popularity, at the end of the year public opinion polls mostly
    indicated that the AKP remained the dominant party in the country
    with public support of around 26-34 percent, while only three other
    parties, the CHP, the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) and the DYP
    may have a chance of winning over 10 percent of the vote -- the
    threshold for parliamentary representation -- at the next election
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