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ANKARA: Sezer: The Most Criticized President Ever

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  • ANKARA: Sezer: The Most Criticized President Ever

    SEZER: THE MOST CRITICIZED PRESIDENT EVER
    Serkan DemÝrtaÞ

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Aug 29 2007

    It would not be wrong to argue that outgoing President Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer was Turkey's most criticized president. Sezer was harshly
    criticized during his seven-year-and-three-month long term in office
    not only by anti-secularist circles but also liberals, media gurus
    and politicians (except for members of the Republican People's Party).

    There were various reasons for criticizing him. Closing the doors of
    Cankaya Palace to women that wore a headscarf, being distant from the
    Justice and Development Party's (AKP) government, not being involved
    in foreign policy and in general not behaving in accordance with the
    code of conduct of politics were the main sources of criticism.

    "I think Sezer's term will be intensely discussed in the future," Fehmi
    Koru said, according to the Web site of the private NTV station. Koru's
    main point is Sezer's political coldness toward Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdoðan. "Sezer could digest neither Abdullah Gul's short stay
    in the prime ministry nor Erdoðan's term in office.

    But he also had problems with former Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit,
    causing Turkey's gravest economic in 2001," he said.

    Modesty in the presidency

    The then-president of the Constitutional Court Sezer was elected as
    president in 2000 by a three-party coalition under the leadership of
    Ecevit, as a result of a compromise deal between the three parties.

    >From the first day he was elected, the media started to compare him
    with former president Suleyman Demirel. Many were arguing that his
    nonpartisan background would be both advantageous and disadvantageous
    for the country.

    "I think he was a good president," Ali Sirmen, a columnist for daily
    Cumhuriyet said. "He introduced modesty to Turkish politics.

    Turkish politicians should have taken lessons from him," he said.

    What Sirmen refers to is Sezer's sensitivity to frugality. He made
    huge amounts of savings in the presidential budget, paying his own
    expenses, registering the gifts presented to him during his tenure
    with the presidency including paintings worth millions of Liras.

    Unlike the prime minister, ministers and military elite, Sezer never
    allowed his motor convoy to violate traffic rules.

    "No one can deny this, he has really shown a good example," Koru said.

    Third man?

    For many secularists, on the other hand, Sezer could be counted
    as the third man after the founder of the republic Kemal Ataturk
    and his closest aide, the second president of the republic, Ýsmet
    Ýnonu. "I realize that I've placed Sezer in third rank of my list of
    'the presidents in my heart,' after Ataturk and Ýnonu," Orhan Birgit
    wrote in his column in daily Cumhuriyet yesterday.

    No 'exclusives' to media

    Sezer, during his long term in the presidency, refused to give
    exclusive interviews or hold press conferences. He signaled that
    he would keep his distance from the media in the very first days
    following his election. On the sidelines of a reception he was quoted
    as saying to Ankara representatives of the media: "Please do not take
    it personally, but I won't give any interviews to any of you." He
    kept his word and preferred to convey his messages through written
    statements on national days.

    But he never cut his ties with a group of journalists known for their
    secular views. But these journalists never wrote about their meetings
    with the president. "He directly called me when I was home.

    It was him and he called personally," Umur Talu wrote yesterday in
    daily Sabah.

    Talu also pointed at Sezer's veto of a decree introduced by the Ecevit
    government after a demand by the military, which could pave the way
    for the state to investigate almost all public servants.

    "Those who are criticizing him today were applauding him then and
    those who support him were very much in anger," Talu said.

    Weakest point: Foreign affairs

    As a former diplomatic correspondent who witnessed Demirel's active
    foreign policy contributions to Turkish foreign policy, Koru said
    it is fair to say that Sezer's weakest point was his ignoring of
    foreign affairs. His main argument was that foreign policy was the
    responsibility of the government and he could only provide additional
    support to it, of course if needed.

    He was hesitant to participate in international meetings or
    conferences. The number of his visits to foreign countries was nearly
    half that of his predecessor. He never traveled to the United States,
    an indicator of the anti-U.S. feelings in Turkish society.

    "President Sezer's main contribution to Turkish foreign policy was
    his efforts to disapprove of a motion introduced to Parliament for
    participating in the Iraq war led the U.S.," Koru said.

    Ignoring Pamuk's achievement

    Another remarkable point was his stance toward Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's
    first and only Nobel laureate. Sezer refused to congratulate Pamuk
    and totally ignored the achievement. The reported reason for that
    were Pamuk's words on the Armenian genocide and Kurdish issue.

    "President would never forgive such indecent words," a source in the
    presidency said to daily Radikal, when the issue was in the limelight
    last year.

    Ozal, Demirel, Sezer

    President Sezer had many points on which to be criticized but he
    surely introduced to Turkey a different way of engaging in politics
    with his modesty, with his efforts to use more "Turkish words" and his
    commitment to the Constitution. It would be futile to compare Sezer
    with his predecessor Turgut Ozal who said, "nothing will happen by
    violating the Constitution once" or Suleyman Demirel who played a
    major role in the ousting of Islamic-rooted Necmettin Erbakan from
    government. President Sezer will be remembered for his own deeds.

    --Boundary_(ID_psMjsubNhks+nuCqMuiORw)--
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