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ANKARA: ANAVATAN targets Interior Minister Aksu with censure

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  • ANKARA: ANAVATAN targets Interior Minister Aksu with censure

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 31 2007

    ANAVATAN targets Interior Minister Aksu with censure

    The New Anatolian / Ankara
    31 January 2007


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    The interior minister will be held accountable for his failures over
    the last five years through the censure motion filed by the
    Motherland Party (ANAVATAN), said party leader Erkan Mumcu yesterday.


    Mumcu, speaking at a party group meeting, reiterated his claim that
    the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party doesn't protect people
    who are not close to it, and added that Interior Minister Abdulkadir
    Aksu will be called to account for favoritism.

    "He will also be held accountable for the lack of protection for a
    man, despite a tip-off 11 months before the murder," said Mumcu,
    citing recent media reports that a university student detained in
    relation to the killing of Armenian origin Turkish journalist Hrant
    Dink was actually a police informer and told the police that Dink
    would be gunned down almost a year ago.

    ANAVATAN officials submitted a censure motion against Aksu after the
    address by their leader.

    Mumcu also touched on the slogan controversy, which even spread to
    football matches and called upon all to put an end to the debate over
    the slogan: "We're all Hrant, we're all Armenians."

    "Can you see the current agitation surrounding the public?" asked the
    ANAVATAN leader, adding the mood of "social insanity" will grow worse
    due to irresponsible remarks by "two-faced, mindless politicians." He
    called other leaders to stop trying to exploit the murder and the
    social reaction following the killing.

    'There is no deep state, there is plain govt'

    Erkan Mumcu went on to scold politicians, in particular the premier,
    for his recent remark that there is a state-within-state in Turkey
    and that it should be curbed.

    "There is no deep state in Turkey as Erdogan sees it; there is plain
    politics, a plain government. Because of your plainness you consider
    gangs deep," said the opposition party leader, adding, "There are
    only several minor gangs, cliques using the power of the state, and
    at the same time used by it for ideological purposes."

    He also added that the government is fond of creating straw men in
    the dark and calling them the deep state. "The government has no
    intention of changing the system but they are using it to assume the
    post of president," claimed Mumcu.

    The deep state remarks by the premier also opened the government to
    criticism from other political parties, who scolded the government
    for what they said was its inability to fight gangs using the means
    of the state.

    Political Islamist Felicity Party (SP) deputy leader Ertan Yulek said
    that the premier, as the head of the government of the country, has
    no right to complain, but instead should do whatever is needed to
    eliminate the source of complaint. However the government is unable
    to do so, added the deputy leader.

    True Path Party (DYP) leader Mehmet Agar said the remarks by the
    premier showed that the AK Party has no intention of curbing the deep
    state. Social Democrat People's Party (SHP) leader Murat Karayalcin,
    emphasizing the word "curb" in the premier's remark regarding the
    deep state, said that a dysfunctional but existing deep state is
    enough for the premier but that they cannot accept it.
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