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Bishop Says Turkey's Poll Results Should Be Good For Catholics

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  • Bishop Says Turkey's Poll Results Should Be Good For Catholics

    BISHOP SAYS TURKEY'S POLL RESULTS SHOULD BE GOOD FOR CATHOLICS
    By Carol Glatz

    Catholic News Service
    July 24 2007

    ROME (CNS) -- An overwhelming victory for Turkey's ruling
    Islamic-oriented party should be a "positive thing" for the nation's
    Catholics, said Bishop Luigi Padovese, apostolic administrator of
    Anatolia, Turkey.

    "The relationships the prime minister has built up with Europe over
    the past years are such that it is difficult to imagine (there would
    be any) fundamentalist involvement" in shaping future Turkish policies,
    Bishop Padovese told the Rome newspaper Il Messaggero July 24.

    Bishop Padovese said he thought "Catholics might also demand" some
    of the reforms many moderate Muslims are asking for, such as greater
    freedom of expression.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and Development Party
    secured more than 46 percent of the votes at the end of general
    elections July 22. The win gave the center-right, conservative party
    an absolute majority in the new parliament, with 341 of the 550
    legislative seats.

    "Erdogan will continue his platform of reforms," Bishop Padovese said.

    Turkey's Constitution establishes strict controls over public
    expressions of religious belief and policies, which include restricting
    Muslim women from wearing head scarves and a general decree against
    private religious colleges.

    Bishop Padovese said if secularism in the past helped foster the
    development of democracy in Turkey and "did not allow real religious
    pluralism, now it is desirable that (such pluralism) be put into
    effect."

    He said the prevailing opinion of most Catholics and the Orthodox
    and Armenian patriarchs "is support for Erdogan. He has moved toward
    reforms and he offers, in this aspect, guarantees," the bishop said.

    The prime minister called the victory a "triumph of democracy" and
    promised the party would "press ahead with reforms and economic
    development" as well as membership in the European Union, the
    Rome-based news agency AsiaNews reported July 23.

    Erdogan said the party would strive for national unity and respect
    for "democracy and (the) secular nature" of Turkey's government,
    reported AsiaNews.
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