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Islamist roots tug in Turkey; Secularism enforced by the military

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  • Islamist roots tug in Turkey; Secularism enforced by the military

    The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia)
    July 21, 2007 Saturday
    Final Edition


    Islamist roots tug in Turkey; Secularism enforced by the military
    challenged by support for fundamentalist ruling party

    by Matthew Fisher, CanWest News Service


    ISTANBUL -- Turks voting in parliamentary elections Sunday are
    focused on issues such as how to keep the vibrant economy racing
    ahead, preventing the rise of Kurdish power in northern Iraq from
    spilling over into Turkey's Kurdish areas, and whether to continue
    trying to win membership in the European Union.

    But the most emotive issue by far is whether this country of 70
    million, which forms a bridge between the Middle East and Europe,
    should remain secular and western-oriented, as it has been since
    Kemal Ataturk founded the republic on the ruins of the Ottoman Empire
    more than 80 years ago, or draw closer to its Islamist roots.

    And if Turkey decides to turn towards Islam, will the staunchly
    secular Turkish military launch another coup?

    Didem Mercan plans to vote for the Republican People's Party, which
    was founded by Ataturk, because she fears the Islamist connections of
    the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

    She worries that if the AKP wins a second majority in Parliament, it
    could force women to wear headscarves. Clad in blue jeans and a
    summery blouse, her fingernails painted bright red, the 23-year old
    communications student is a walking advertisement for her belief that
    "religion should have no place in my personal life, and I am prepared
    to fight for that right."

    Mesut Topcu, on the other hand, said he intends to vote for the AKP
    because, since it won power in November 2002, the authorities have
    stopped hassling men in the deeply conservative Istanbul suburb of
    Fatih about wearing the skullcaps, baggy trousers and long beards of
    pious Muslims.

    Topcu, an electrical engineer, was unequivocal about the value of
    headscarves, which remain banned in schools and government offices
    but are commonly worn by women in Fatih, as are black, Iranian-style
    full-body chadors. "I am sad for a woman who does not cover herself.
    She will go to hell on judgment day."

    The public expression of such sharp differences in opinion is
    relatively new in Turkey, but the debate is many centuries old.

    The country's population is about 98 per cent Muslim, but its history
    has been profoundly influenced by geography. In the northwest and
    northeast, Turkey is bordered by Christian Greece, Bulgaria, Georgia
    and Armenia, while in the east and south, it sits alongside Muslim
    Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq and Syria. It is also the only Muslim nation
    in NATO.

    Istanbul, Turkey's largest city with a population of 12 million, has
    always felt the pull of east and west particularly keenly. Famously
    divided by the Bosporus Strait into European and Asian parts, is home
    to spectacular mosques and minarets as well as the Orthodox Church's
    oldest patriarchate.

    Although he was Muslim, Ataturk replaced sharia law with a
    Swiss-style legal system. Women were given the vote, veils were
    banned, drinking alcohol was permitted, and Latin script replaced
    Arabic letters. Many secularists are convinced that some of those
    fundamental changes are now at risk if the government of Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wins another parliamentary majority.

    "They are really Islamists and we believe that they wear a mask right
    now, trying to pretend that they aren't," said architect Eliz Ofil,
    25, sitting in a smart cafe, watching huge tankers and freighters
    from Russia, Kazakhstan, Iran and many other countries gingerly
    navigate the narrow Bosporus artery between the Mediterranean and
    Black seas.

    Metres away, Egeman Bargis, an AKP deputy and Erdogan's chief foreign
    policy adviser, did not hide his contempt for such views. "This is
    not a difference of opinion between Islamists and secularists," he
    said. "It is a difference of opinion between those who want more
    democracy or less. The opposition has tried at every chance to create
    tension."

    Although some of the AKP's most prominent members have Islamist ties,
    the party has not spoken much about religion since it emerged as a
    grassroots movement a few years ago. It has positioned itself on the
    centre-right and concentrated, with considerable success, on pursuing
    internationalist economic policies. Turkey's GDP has risen more than
    seven per cent per year since 2003, per-capita income has more than
    doubled, and inflation has been reduced to single digits for the
    first time in decades.

    But the AKP crossed a line with the military when it proposed Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul, a practising Muslim whose wife covers her
    head, as its choice for president. In what was dubbed an e-coup, the
    military derailed the plan last April by posting on its website a
    warning about a "growing threat" to Turkey's secular practices.

    Erdogan's response, however, was to seek a new mandate by calling
    early parliamentary elections.

    There are indications that the military may have misjudged the public
    mood, or perhaps didn't care what it was. Polls suggest the AKP's
    share of the vote will increase to more than 40 per cent from 34,
    largely because of a backlash against the military's stance.

    Although the prime minister's party is more popular than ever in
    religiously conservative rural areas and gaining support in urban
    areas because of its economic policies, the AKP may actually win
    fewer seats because of an electoral system that only allows parties
    with more than 10 per cent of the vote to have representation in the
    550-seat Parliament.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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