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Turkish parliament to be sworn in

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  • Turkish parliament to be sworn in

    Turkish parliament to be sworn in

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/ europe/6930915.stm

    Published: 2007/08/04 11:10:03 GMT

    Turkey is preparing to swear in a new parliament with attention
    focusing on 20 pro-Kurdish deputies, represented for the first time
    since 1991.
    The new deputies say they want reconciliation and a peaceful solution
    to the Turkish-Kurdish conflict, which has claimed 30,000 lives since
    1983.

    The last time Kurdish MPs were elected, they incurred jail terms by
    trying to take their oath of office in Kurdish.

    Their party was later banned for its alleged links to the PKK rebel
    group.

    The new parliament is to convene after last month's elections saw the
    Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) strengthen its
    position in the house, whose first major task will be to elect a new
    president.

    The AKP's previous nomination for the post, Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gul, triggered a political crisis and a warning from the military that
    it was ready to intervene.

    Secularists were concerned that Mr Gul began his career in the
    pro-Islamic Welfare Party, and has a wife who wears the headscarf - an
    extremely divisive symbol in Turkey.

    Clashes

    Deputies will convene to swear their loyalty to a united, independent
    and secular Turkish republic.

    Alongside the pro-Kurdish MPs, deputies from the nationalist MHP party
    will also be taking their seats.


    PARTYS IN PARLIAMENT
    AKP 341 seats
    CHP 99 seats
    MHP 70 seats
    Kurdish MPs (DTP) 20 seats
    Democratic Left Party 13 seats
    Independents 6 seats
    Total 550 seats

    The MHP won 70 seats in the 22 July poll, after running a hardline
    anti-Kurdish campaign, at a time when clashes between the army and the
    Kurdish separatist PKK are on the rise.

    Kurdish MPs from the Democratic Society Party (DTP) insist they want to
    use parliament as a platform for dialogue.

    The nationalists, though, say they will not talk to anyone who refuses
    to condemn the PKK as terrorists.

    Presidential elections

    BBC's correspondent in Turkey, Sarah rah Rainsford, says Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul has refused to rule himself out of the running
    when the election process begins in ten days' time.


    A candidate needs a two-thirds majority to be elected president in the
    first two rounds of voting and an absolute majority, 276, in the third
    round.

    The AKP should be easily able to elect a candidate in the third round.
    But it also needs a quorum of 367 MPs, a goal which eluded the party
    last May and led to the early parliamentary elections.

    The MHP has hinted it will not boycott the presidential poll, thus
    ensuring a quorum.

    The nationalists hope, however, to be able to put pressure on the
    government to nominate a less controversial candidate than Mr Gul.
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