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Hard-Line Gain In Turkish Vote Poses Challenge To Governing Party

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  • Hard-Line Gain In Turkish Vote Poses Challenge To Governing Party

    HARD-LINE GAIN IN TURKISH VOTE POSES CHALLENGE TO GOVERNING PARTY
    By Sabrina Tavernise Published

    International Herald Tribune, France
    July 23 2007

    ISTANBUL: The election on Sunday in Turkey gave a substantial
    victory in Parliament to the governing Muslim pro-Western party,
    which promised more moderation and prosperity. But on the margins,
    more hard-line sentiments surfaced, posing a potential obstacle to
    this country's progress.

    The Nationalist Action Party, which appeals to voters on the far right,
    who fiercely defend the integrity of Turkey's borders, received 14
    percent of the vote, enough to enter Parliament after failing in the
    past election.

    The party plays on fears, which reach back to the fall of the Ottoman
    Empire, that western powers seek to carve up the country. It gained
    momentum in recent months when militant Kurdish separatists stepped up
    killings of Turkish soldiers in the country's southeast. The recent
    surge in foreign investment into Turkey's growing economy is also
    cause for alarm among its supporters.

    "Our country is about to be broken into pieces, and we need to prevent
    it," said a textile worker, wearing a button-down black shirt in
    the style of Italian Fascists often worn by hard-line nationalists
    here. "There are three things - my country, my flag, my prayer. I
    can't let anyone touch any of them."

    The killings of an Armenian journalist and of three Christian
    evangelists this year were both nationalist-driven crimes. At the
    same time, the election swept at least 23 Kurdish candidates into
    Parliament, a significant victory for Kurds, nearly a fifth of Turkey's
    population. They have not been represented on a national level in
    more than a decade, since a deputy was ejected from Parliament when
    she spoke Kurdish during a swearing-in ceremony.

    The Kurds could not be further apart from the nationalists, and many
    Turks said they could not imagine how the two groups would sit in
    the same room, never mind hold negotiations.

    This is especially the case because many of the Kurdish politicians
    openly admire the militant Kurdish separatist, Abdullah Ocalan, who
    led the militant Kurdistan Worker's Party in a violent fight against
    the Turkish Army for years and who is now in a Turkish prison.

    For the nationalists, Ocalan is Turkey's top terrorist enemy. The
    central gimmick in the nationalists' campaign platform was holding
    up a rope in a mock fight over who would get the honor of hanging him.

    Despite the Kurds' open support of Ocalan, the Kurdish deputies could
    be an important group for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose
    Justice and Development Party received about 340 of 550 seats.

    Together they could come close to the 367 required to make
    constitutional amendments.

    Kurds ran as independents to bypass a 10 percent hurdle to get into
    Parliament, resulting in the largest number of independent candidates
    in Turkish history.

    Ferhat Kentel, a sociologist at Bilgi University who recently conducted
    a study on Turkish nationalism for the Turkish Economic and Social
    Studies Foundation, found that extreme nationalists are bewildered
    by the recent changes and unable to find a footing in the economy.

    He said the nationalist party, once in Parliament, might overcome
    its sense of being lost and unrepresented. "Violence is the tool of
    the weakest political actors," he said. "You resort to violence when
    you have no more words left."

    At a polling station in a nationalist neighborhood on the outskirts
    of Istanbul, a thin young man, a member of the nationalist party,
    spoke in an intense, emphatic tone on Sunday of his excitement for
    the party's expected success. "Now we have pens," he said, pulling
    one from his pocket and jabbing it in the air.

    The Kurds may be experiencing a similar relief.

    In a poor Kurdish neighborhood in Istanbul on Monday, men playing
    cards in a teashop agreed that the new Kurdish candidates would give
    voice to Kurdish woes.

    "At least it's a start," said a man with a worried face who gave
    only his first name, Nurullah. "I'm more hopeful the conflict will
    be debated in Parliament."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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