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Turkish 'Secular' Demonstration Prepares Way For Military Coup

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  • Turkish 'Secular' Demonstration Prepares Way For Military Coup

    TURKISH 'SECULAR' DEMONSTRATION PREPARES WAY FOR MILITARY COUP

    Socialist worker, UK
    May 1 2007

    Generals in Turkey have threatened "military intervention" to halt
    a vote in the country's parliament that could see Abdullah Gul, the
    current foreign minister from the mainstream Islamist party Justice
    and Development (AK), elected as president.

    The generals posted the warning on the Turkish military website last
    Friday evening. The next day hundreds of thousands took to the streets
    of the capital Ankara in defence of "secularism."

    The media painted the demonstration as popular opposition to the
    prospect of an Islamist president.

    Yet behind the protests lies a sinister move to rein in Turkish
    opposition to a possible US war on Iran, and a cynical manoeuvre by
    the military to reassert its power after its supporters were humiliated
    in the 2002 elections.

    In 2003, MPs belonging to the AK blocked moves by the US to use Turkey
    as a staging post for its invasion of Iraq.

    But, as the occupation of Iraq descends into chaos, the US badly
    needs Turkish support for any possible attack on Iran. The generals,
    in turn, want the freedom to join in the attack.

    The Turkish military has been stoking a conflict with the Kurds in the
    south east of the country. Many people believe that the military are
    behind the sectarian murders of five Christians and the assassination
    of Hrant Dink, an outspoken activist from Turkey's oppressed Armenian
    minority.

    The generals attempted to blame the Islamists for the killings.

    There was a massive response to Dink's murder. Over 200,000 people
    marched at his funeral chanting, "We are all Armenians."

    The military and their right wing supporters have responded to the
    support for the Armenians and Gul's possible election by playing up
    the threat to the secular system.

    The right wing newspaper Cumhuriyet warned Turks that if Gul becomes
    president, the country "will be put back 100 years".

    The aim of the protest last Saturday was far from being simply an
    outpouring of support for a secular system - it was to build support
    for a military coup.

    http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/article.ph p?article_id=11324
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