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ANKARA: Most Leftist Parties Do Not Support April 14 Rally

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  • ANKARA: Most Leftist Parties Do Not Support April 14 Rally

    MOST LEFTIST PARTIES DO NOT SUPPORT APRIL 14 RALLY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 12, 2007

    Many of the parties on Turkey's left have no intention of attending,
    or in some cases even supporting, the "Cankaya meeting," a protest
    rally on April 14 organized by the Kemalist Thought Association (ADD).

    Amongst the parties which will not attend the ADD rally will be
    the Freedom and Solidarity Party (ODP), the Turkish Communist Party
    (TKP) and the Labor Party (EMEP). Though the Workers' Party (ÝP) has
    expressed support for the April 14 rally, it has also noted that it
    has reservations about the underlying philosophy of the protest. In
    addition the ÝP's general leader Doðu Perincek will not be able to
    attend the meeting, as he will be in Paris on the same day to protest
    Armenian allegations of genocide.

    Speaking about why his party would not participate in the ADD protest,
    ODP leader Ufuk Uras said that he thought it was necessary to stay far
    away from a platform which was guided by those who had attempted coups
    in the name of the democratic public. EMEP general leader Levent Tuzel
    echoed these remarks, noting that taking a look back at events from
    Turkey's recent history, the upcoming April 14 meeting was reminiscent
    of some "contra-guerilla tactics" experienced by the country. As for
    the TKP, leader Aydemir Guler said that his party was not interested
    in the Cankaya Meeting.

    ODP general leader Uras talked about his party's views of whom the
    new Turkish president should be, noting that it should be someone
    who kept not only the needs of the military and bureaucracy in mind,
    but also those of all the different parts of society. Uras also
    underlined that the new Turkish president should not attempt to deny
    Turkey's many cultural identities and should be respectful of Turkey's
    unique fabric. He explained: "The new president must be a democrat
    and must not make concessions where universal principles of justice
    are concerned. The new president must be fully aware of every kind
    of guardianship he or she has over civil politics. It is useful to
    examine the situation from this perspective. Cankaya must move from
    being a glass palace to being an office where the various sections
    of society can speak and be listened to. Of course this Parliament
    holds the legitimate right to elect the president, but it should also
    be aware that that seat is being filled only due to an election law
    that tramples the principle of justice in representation. And it must
    thus search for ways to alter this and right it."

    EMEP leader Tuzel noted that in the run up to the presidential
    elections organizations formed by retired military officers might
    in fact appear to be like the more left-leaning groups that form the
    front legs of the opposition CHP, but that in fact these parties are
    moving into action by coalescing with the right. Tuzel noted then
    that these new initiatives hold nothing for the immediate needs of
    the workers and laborers of today. He said: "We have larger problems
    on our agenda to deal with; hunger, democratization and the events
    in the Middle East. These are much more important for us. We see
    the upcoming organized meeting as attempting to put together a front
    which will then put pressure on the prime minister and the rest of
    the administration. We have read about similar tactics before in the
    media, namely the 'andýc' (a leaked military memorandum) incident
    and the retired general's notebook."

    Meanwhile ÝP Party leader Perincek, who will be in Paris for a
    different protest on April 14, spoke about his ambiguous support for
    the ADD meeting: "As a party we support this meeting, but we do find
    some things lacking: it is not enough to say only that Tayyip Erdoðan
    cannot be president. You also have to present some sort of solution
    to Turkey. This rally cannot simply be to come out in protest of
    something; it must be a protest against Tayyip Erdoðan's presidency
    within the larger framework of the national government project... This
    meeting has some aspects to it that are lacking."

    --Boundary_(ID_2NFbvET6ZWLQhf7vdsk t7Q)--
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