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Rice Cautious On Turkish Constitutional Crisis

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  • Rice Cautious On Turkish Constitutional Crisis

    RICE CAUTIOUS ON TURKISH CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS
    By Desmond Butler

    Associated Press
    April 15 2008

    U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza

    Rice took a cautious line on Turkey's constitutional crisis in a
    speech at a Turkish-American conference Monday on relations between
    the two countries.

    In her speech at the conference organized by the American-Turkish
    Council, Rice avoided direct reference to an issue that is dividing
    Turkey. The country's top court decided Monday to hear a case for
    banning the Islamic-rooted ruling party.

    In her speech, Rice made oblique references to the case, comparing
    Turkey's tensions with the struggles of the United States to resolve
    its own constitutional problems over time.

    When asked about the issue by a reporter after the speech, Rice said
    the United States is following the developments closely and called
    it a matter for Turks to decide.

    "We believe and hope that this will be decided within Turkey's secular
    democratic context, and by secular democratic principles," she said.

    Rice's approach stood in contrast to that of European Union. Last week,
    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso warned that banning
    the party would have a "major impact" on Turkey's ties with the EU,
    which the Turkish government wants to join.

    The case stems from a charge by a Turkish prosecutor that the
    country's ruling party has violated constitutional laws protecting
    secular principals.

    The prosecutor has asked the court to bar 71 people, including Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul, from politics
    for five years.

    The court's decision to hear the case has highlighted the power
    struggle between the secular establishment and allies of Erdogan,
    pious Muslims who have advocated Western-style reforms as part of
    Turkey's bid to join the European Union.

    In her speech, Rice did pointedly praise Erdogan for a proposal
    to soften a law that restricts freedom of speech. The law, which
    currently makes denigrating Turkish identity or insulting the
    country's institutions punishable by up to three years in prison,
    has drawn criticism from the European Union and the United States.

    Turkish-American relations have been tense in recent years, but have
    improved since the United States began aiding Turkish operations
    against Kurdish rebels in Northern Iraq by providing intelligence.

    The Bush administration also headed off a push by some lawmakers last
    year to pass a resolution opposed by Turkey that would have declared
    the World War I-era killings of Armenians a genocide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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