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ANKARA: Abdullah Gul : A devout Muslim with a western mind

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  • ANKARA: Abdullah Gul : A devout Muslim with a western mind

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    Aug 18 2007


    ABDULLAH GUL : A devout Muslim with a western mind


    The New Anatolian / Ankara

    18 August 2007


    Abdullah Gül (born October 29, 1950) is the deputy prime minister,
    foreign minister of Turkey, and presidential candidate.

    Born in Kayseri to Ahmet Hamdi, an imam, and Adviye, Gül was brought
    up in a conservative family environment. His great-grandfather was an
    Arab who immigrated from Siirt to Develi around 1915. Gül was also
    called with the name Cumhur by his family.

    Gül studied economics at the University of Istanbul and wrote his
    dissertation there. During his graduate education, he studied for two
    years in London and Exeter. He pursued an academic career after that
    and worked at the higher education facilities in Adapazari,
    collaborating in the establishment of a department for industrial
    engineering and teaching management courses of future Sakarya
    University. Between 1983 and 1991, he worked at the Islamic
    Development Bank (IDB). In 1991, Gül became a lecturer in
    international management.

    Gül became acquainted with right-wing politics early during his high
    school years. During his university education, he became a member of
    Islamist-nationalist Millî Türk Talebe Birligi or National Turkish
    Student's Union in the line of Necip Fazil's Büyük Dogu (Grand
    Orient) current. He was elected a member of the Turkish parliament
    for Refah Partisi (RP, "the Welfare Party") from Kayseri in 1991 and
    1995.

    He was named state minister in the Erbakan government in 1996 but the
    government was forced out of office by the military in 1997. The
    supreme court closed down the Welfare Party claiming it was Islamic
    fundamentalist.

    In 1999, he kept his seat as a member of Fazilet Partisi (FP, "the
    Virtue Party"), successor to Welfare Party. He felt the Welfare Party
    as well as the FP were both archaic and that such conservative
    parties needed serious reformation. So along with Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan he led the reformation movement within the FP. He challenged
    the leadership and at a convention became candidate for chairman. He
    lost with a few votes and his challenge shook the foundations of the
    Islamic movement. When the FP was closed down by the constitutional
    court he and his colleagues founded the Justice and Development (AK)
    Party (Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi). The founders of the AK Party
    accepted that they came from religious roots but vehemently opposed
    their party having a religious agenda. They said the party members
    were devout Muslims but the party distanced itself from political
    Islam.

    Gul was elected again to represent Kayseri, in 2002, and in November
    2002 was appointed Prime Minister.

    Gül's first challenge came as prime minister when he had to be
    involved in sensitive negotiations with the United States surrounding
    any Turkish participation in the Iraq war. A parliamentary motion
    allowing U.S. to use Turkish soil against Saddam Hussein and sending
    Turkish troops to Iraq was defeated. This was regarded as a major
    setback for Gul.

    However, after becoming foreign minister in March 2003 he rapidly
    found his feet in his new role, becoming the key player not only in
    Turkey's attempts to receive an accession date for the European
    Union, but also in its attempts to improve relations with Syria and
    maintain its special relationship with the Turkic-speaking countries
    of Central Asia and the Caucasus. He also played a key role in
    shaping more moderate policies on Cyprus.

    On February 6, 2007, Gül flew to the United States to meet with
    Condoleezza Rice and President George W. Bush in order to dissuade a
    law from reaching the floor of the US House of Representatives that
    would recognize the deaths of Armenians in 1915 as the Armenian
    Genocide

    Prime Minister Erdogan announced on April 24, 2007 that Gül will be
    the Justice and Development Party candidate in the 2007 presidential
    election. Previously, there had been speculation that Erdogan himself
    would be the party's candidate, which had provoked substantial
    opposition from secularists. Mass rallies were held by the
    secularists.

    The opposition groups in Parliament effectively blocked Gul's
    election and then cancelled the ballots at the supreme court. Gül
    stepped down from candidacy on May 6, 2007. Early elections for July
    22 were scheduled.

    A few days later, on 11 May when inquired after the amendments to the
    Turkish constitution which now allowed the people to elect the
    president directly rather than a parliamentary vote, Gül announced
    that his candidacy was ongoing despite stating that he had pulled his
    candidacy on 6 May.

    The amendments did not go into force because President Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer wanted a referendum on the issue. The referendum is scheduled
    for October 21 so the newly elected Parliament was charged to elect
    the new president. If the amendment are approved by the referendum
    then the next president will be elected by the people.

    The AK Party said it had been denied the right to elect Gul as
    president and played this effectively through out the elections
    campaign as a gross injustice. The party won a massive landslide in
    the elections gaining 46.6 percent of the votes. The party and its
    leadership said the nation had not only given it a mandate to run the
    country for another five years but also wanted to see Gul as
    president.

    The party has now decided to officially name Gul as its candidate for
    president.

    On August 21, 1980, Abdullah Gül married Hayrünnisa Özyurt (b. 1965),
    and the couple has three children, two sons named Mehmet Emre and
    Ahmet Münir and a daughter named Kübra. He is a dedicated fan of the
    football club Besiktas.
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