Stirpes  

Go Back   Stirpes > Newsroom & Current Affairs > World News

World News News and articles about current political, economical and social trends and issues in the world.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)     Quote this post in a PM
Old Sunday, April 15th, 2007
Senior Moderator
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 8,213
Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.
Default More than 300,000 protest against Turkey's leader

Quote:
More than 300,000 protest against Turkey's leader

Sat. Apr. 14 2007

Associated Press

ANKARA, Turkey -- A sea of flag-waving demonstrators poured into the streets of the capital Saturday to protest a possible presidential run by the pro-Islamic prime minister, whose party has been eroding secular Turks' longtime grip on power.
With a crowd estimated at more than 300,000, the protest was one of the country's largest in decades. Red Turkish flags hung from balconies and windows and fluttered in the hands of protesters, who chanted, "We don't want an imam as president!" and "Turkey is secular and will remain secular!"
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has brandished his strong religious convictions, speaking out against restrictions on wearing Islamic-style head scarves in government offices and schools, and taking steps to bolster religious institutions in this country founded on the principle of secular rule.
He also tried to criminalize adultery before being forced to back down under intense pressure from the European Union, which Turkey is trying to join.
The country's pro-secular president, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, has been a brake on the pro-Islamic movement but is stepping down on May 16. Erdogan's Justice and Development party, which dominates parliament, is expected this month to announce its candidate to replace Sezer in the appointed presidency. Erdogan is expected to announce whether he will run after a meeting with his party on Wednesday.
If he runs, the party is expected to select him as president. Another pro-Islamic official could then be selected for the premiership, placing the executive branch entirely under the control of the Islamic-leaning ruling party.
Turkey aspires to become the first Muslim member of the European Union, and has long touted itself as a bridge between the Western and Islamic worlds. Erdogan enjoys some support in Europe and the United States, where backers hold up Turkey as proof that devout Islam and democracy can be compatible.
But many opponents at home are suspicious. Tens of thousands travelled from across the country overnight to attend the rally in downtown Ankara.
Military officials estimated the crowd at more than 300,000, while organizers said the total number of participants was more than a million. Military estimates of past demonstrations have generally proven more accurate than organizers' numbers.
Police cordoned off the official meeting area - near the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the revered founder of modern Turkey and the symbol of its secular identity.
Starting in 1923 in the ruins of the Ottoman Empire, Ataturk, a soldier, set about on a series of secular reforms that imposed Western laws, replaced Arabic script with the Latin alphabet, banned Islamic dress and granted women the right to vote.
The fiercely pro-secular military staged three coups between 1960 and 1980, pressured a pro-Islamic premier - Erdogan's mentor - out of power in 1997, and retains a strong influence over politics.
"We hope that someone who is loyal to the principles of the republic - not just in words but in essence - is elected president," Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, chief of the military, said Thursday in a statement widely interpreted as a warning to Erdogan not to run.
Any serious tensions between the government and the military could have a serious effect on the economy, analysts warn.
[source]
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)     Quote this post in a PM
Old Thursday, April 19th, 2007
Senior Moderator
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 8,213
Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.Marcus Marulus is a deity.
Default Re: More than 300,000 protest against Turkey's leader

Quote:
April 19, 2007 edition
Turks wary of possible Islamist power play

Prime Minister Recep Erdogan's potential bid for president has sparked protests by secularists.

By Yigal Schleifer | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor ISTANBUL - "Will he or won't he?" That is the question that has gripped Turkey for the last several weeks.
In early May, Turkey's parliament will elect the country's new president ? a ceremonial though powerful and highly symbolic position ? and the leading candidate is the current prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.



Fed up: Protesters rallied against Mr. Erdogan?s possible bid for president in Istanbul Sunday. Serkan Senturk/AP



Although the prime minister holds more power, the presidency is in many ways a more prestigious position. Seen by many Turks as the guardian of the country's secular system, the president can veto laws, appoint key officials, and is commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
Mr. Erdogan has not yet confirmed that he will seek the presidency, but his party, the Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP), has a solid majority in parliament that would guarantee his successful election.
The prospect of the religious-minded AKP controlling both parliament and the presidency, however, has put Turkey's secular establishment, especially the military, on edge and has had led to an outcry from a large segment of the public, which fears that the delicate balance between religion and state in Turkey could be threatened.
Secularist protesters rally
This past weekend, an estimated 370,000 protesters gathered in Turkey's capital, Ankara, for a rally against the possibility of an Erdogan presidency. Waving Turkish flags and carrying pictures of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, modern Turkey's secularizing founder, the crowd chanted slogans such as "Turkey is secular and will stay secular" and "We don't want an imam in the presidential palace."
Mehmet Erhun, an Istanbul businessman, and his two uncles made the five-hour drive to Ankara for the rally, the first demonstration he has attended in 30 years.
"I was there to make a message that this guy can be president, but he has to take the pressure off the nation. If he keeps polarizing in terms of secularization, then things can get out of control," says Mr. Erhun.
"In Turkey, the general public is usually silent. We are obedient people, unless things get to a limit. And this is a limit," he adds.
With Erdogan's potential candidacy already causing so much tension, several Turkish analysts have suggested that he step aside and let a more consensual candidate come forward.
"When the country faces so many problems and needs so many reforms, why do we need all this needless polarization?" says Sahin Alpay, a political scientist at Istanbul's Bahcesehir University.
"We need a candidate that AKP supports, but that also wouldn't antagonize the military-civilian establishment," he said.
Erdogan is a polarizing figure
Though charismatic and popular with his electorate, Erdogan is very much a lightning rod in Turkish politics. While the country's president is expected to a kind of elder statesmen who sits above the political fray, the straight-shooting Erdogan is seen by many as too deeply involved in party politics to play that kind of role.
Secularists, meanwhile, still remember his efforts a few years ago to make adultery a crime and to rejigger Turkey's educational system to accommodate graduates of religious schools. For many of them, the idea of Erdogan's head-scarfed wife residing in the presidential palace is too much to bear.
"Are you aware of the danger? Clocks will be turned back 100 years on May 16," the secularist Cumhurriyet newspaper recently wrote, referring to the date when the new president will be sworn in.
While not referring specifically to Erdogan, the current president, arch-secularist Ahmet Necdet Sezer, said in a recent speech, "The political regime in Turkey has never faced dangers to that extent since the establishment of the republic."
"For the first time, the pillars of the secular republic are being openly questioned," Mr. Sezer, a former judge, said.
Though often described as a figurehead, the Turkish president is much more than that.
"It has become a guardian position, because it represents the state structure as set up by Ataturk," says Hugh Pope, an Istanbul-based senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, a research and advocacy organization.
For now, Erdogan is keeping his cards close to his chest. A surprise candidate may be put forward, but many experts here believe he will run.
One of the secularists' worries is that once Erdogan is ensconced in the presidential palace, the AKP will use its parliamentary power to create a system where the president has even more power, something the party has talked about doing before.
But legal and political experts believe the way to avoid recurring tension over who is to become president is to actually take away some of the Turkish president's extraordinary powers and restore the position to that of a figurehead.
"The best thing for this country would be to put an end to this strange hybrid form of government where you have a parliament and a very powerful president who is not popularly elected and not accountable to anyone," says Mr. Alpay.
"It doesn't fit in a parliamentary system."

[source]
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
None


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Gul Poised to Become Turkey's President Marcus Marulus World News 0 Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 09:42
Nationalism casts shadow over Turkey's poll battle Marcus Marulus World News 2 Monday, July 23rd, 2007 18:18
Lithuanian bus drivers protest gay ads Aptrgangr Immigration & Crime 0 Tuesday, May 15th, 2007 23:29
Spanish protest gay marriage Pedro Labour & Economic Issues 9 Tuesday, June 21st, 2005 23:43
Neo-Nazis upstaged at protest Nerthus Politics & Institutions 3 Tuesday, March 22nd, 2005 19:22

Locations of visitors to this page

All times are GMT. The time now is 06:56.

Page generated in 0.4284489 seconds with 15 queries.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.1.0