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Turkish Opposition Rides Nationalist Wave In Elections

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  • Turkish Opposition Rides Nationalist Wave In Elections

    TURKISH OPPOSITION RIDES NATIONALIST WAVE IN ELECTIONS

    Raw Story, MA
    http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Turkish_opposition _rides_nationalis_07182007.html
    July 18 2007

    A politician brandishes a noose and calls for a jailed Kurdish leader
    to be hanged; another accuses the prime minister of being a coward for
    not invading Iraq, a third says the premier is the biggest obstacle
    to Turkey's anti-terror effort.

    With the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) leading the
    opinion polls for legislative elections Sunday, opposition parties
    are lashing out at Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's failure to
    quell renewed bloodshed by separatist Kurdish rebels in the southeast.

    The secularist army, often at odds with the AKP's Islamist roots, has
    upped pressure on Erdogan with public appeals for an incursion into
    neighbouring Iraq, where the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK),
    listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and much of the international
    community, takes refuge.

    Funerals of soldiers killed by the PKK have turned from usually solemn
    ceremonies into anti-AKP protests during which ministers are booed
    and the government tagged "murderers."

    "The terrorism problem is right at the heart of the elections,"
    political scientist Fuat Keyman said.

    Public anger boiled over in May when a suspected PKK militant blew
    himself up in Ankara, killing nine people.

    "The opposition is exploiting the people's security fears. The problem
    of terror, the slain soldiers have become political material, which
    is not healthy at all," commented Mehmet Ozcan of the Ankara-based
    think tank USAK.

    The opposition finds fertile ground in a society where nationalism is
    already on the rise, analysts say, pointing at Turkish exasperation
    with US inaction against PKK bases in Iraq and strong opposition in
    Europe to mainly Muslim Turkey's bid for EU membership.

    The main beneficiary of rising nationalist sentiment will be the
    far-right Nationalist Action Party (MHP), which is expected to go
    over the 10-percent national threshold and return to parliament after
    a five-year absence, polling expert Hakan Bayrakci told the Internet
    newspaper Forum.

    "The MHP will pass the threshold thanks to the rise of terrorism,"
    he said. "Otherwise, it would have had a very hard time" getting
    into parliament.

    While the MHP's nationalist campaign is no surprise, the main
    opposition Republican People Party's (CHP) endorsement of a similar
    agenda has stunned many and left a big void in the centre-left of
    Turkish politics.

    The CHP, expected to be the second force in parliament after the AKP,
    "drifted away from its social-democrat identity. It is hard now to
    even call it a democratic party," Keyman said.

    The traditional voice of pro-Western, secular Turks, the CHP is now
    opposed to EU reforms to expand free speech and minority rights and
    leads calls for an incursion into northern Iraq.

    The opposition's reliance on "exaggerated and populist" nationalism
    reflects its failure to offer efficient economic policies to rival the
    AKP, whose four and a half years in power have resulted in economic
    stability and strong growth, Keyman said.

    The prospect of no centre-left voice in the new parliament gave rise
    to an unprecedented grassroots movement that nominated an outspoken
    human rights defender, Baskin Oran, as an independent candidate
    from Istanbul.

    Oran, a respected international relations professor and a close
    associate of slain ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, says he is
    campaigning for the rights of "all the oppressed and alienated" --
    from Kurds and non-Muslim minorities to the unemployed and homosexuals.

    He focuses on expanding Kurdish rights as a means of ending the
    insurgency in the southeast.

    "Nationalism harms the nation most, because it triggers
    counter-nationalism," one of his campaign slogans says.
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