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ISTANBUL: Debate On Religion Takes Over Politics In Ankara

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  • ISTANBUL: Debate On Religion Takes Over Politics In Ankara

    DEBATE ON RELIGION TAKES OVER POLITICS IN ANKARA

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Feb 2 2012
    Turkey

    In response to criticism by the main opposition Republican People's
    Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoğan asks Kılıçdaroğlu if he wants to 'raise atheist generations'

    Political squabbles over religion simmered in Ankara yesterday as Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan asserted that raising devout generations
    was part of his Justice and Development Party's (AKP) mission.

    "Do you expect the conservative democrat AK Party to raise atheist
    generations? This may be your business and objective but not ours. We
    will raise a generation that is conservative and democratic and
    embraces the values and historical principles of its nation," Erdoğan
    said at an AKP gathering.

    His remarks came in response to criticism by Republican People's
    Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who had called the premier a
    "religion-monger" and accused him of fomenting divisions among people
    along religious lines. The row was triggered by the application of
    a CHP deputy to the Council of State seeking the cancelation of a
    regulation that put graduates of imam-hatip religious high-schools
    on equal par with others at university entrance exams.

    Brushing aside CHP accusations that the judiciary had become a
    government puppet, Erdoğan said constitutional amendments approved
    at a referendum in 2010 had marked a "turning point" in reforming
    the judiciary. "The judiciary is not under government command. It is
    being purified from your militant mentality," he said.

    In a bizarre remark to Kılıçdaroğlu, he added: "You are now under the
    magnifying glass. Every step you make and even every breath you take
    is monitored by the nation."

    CHP hits back Erdoğan's comments triggered an angry response from
    the CHP, with the party's Deputy Group Chair Emine Ülker Tarhan
    suggesting Erdoğan's "anger fits" could be the side effect of his
    health problems. "Those are fascist views. He is talking total nonsense
    and should change his advisers," Tarhan told the Hürriyet Daily News.

    "He has a society pattern on his mind. They are trying to design
    society according to their despotic mentality. Designing the judiciary,
    the military and now designing family life - that's too much, too
    much even for the prime minister," she said.

    Tarhan insisted the judiciary had become "an army with a chain of
    command" under government control. "But this army will one day hit
    them as well. They will lose control of the monster they created." A
    former judge, Tarhan said she was proud to be "a militant of democracy
    and judicial independence."

    In further comments yesterday, Erdoğan hailed a move by French
    parliamentarians to appeal a law that would outlaw the denial of
    Armenian "genocide" but raised alarm over "the sly rise of racism,
    xenophobia and Islamophobia" in Europe.

    He argued the bill was the product of this phenomenon and called on
    the European Union to act. "The European Union must take measures as
    a top priority on its agenda," he said.


    From: Baghdasarian
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