Turkish Court Annuls Presidential Vote
By SELCAN HACAOGLU, Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
(05-01) 14:14 PDT ANKARA, Turkey (AP)


Turkey's highest court halted a parliamentary vote Tuesday that looked certain 
to lead to a president rooted in political Islam, a victory for secularists who 
fear the country is moving toward Islamic rule that would undermine their 
Western way of life.


Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded by calling for a constitutional 
amendment to allow the president to be elected by popular vote, rather than by 
the parliament. And he said new parliamentary elections could be held as early 
as June 24, instead of in November as scheduled.


The goal would be to elect a government with a fresh mandate and resolve a 
crisis that has seen the stock market plummet and the pro-secular military 
threaten to intervene.


"God willing, Turkey will go back to its track," Erdogan told reporters late 
Tuesday, referring to the economic and political stability that Turkey had 
enjoyed in recent years.


Earlier, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, the ruling Islamist party's 
presidential candidate, said he would not withdraw his candidacy despite 
Tuesday's setback from the Constitutional Court, a strongly secular body, and 
urged parliamentary elections "as soon as possible."


"What we need to cast off and get rid of these shadows is early elections," Gul 
said.


Erdogan said a new presidential vote would proceed in Parliament on Thursday.


"We will apply to Parliament starting tomorrow morning for early elections," he 
added. "The earliest possible date for elections is June 24 or July 1."


At the heart of the conflict is a fear that Gul's party would use its control 
of both Parliament and the presidency to overcome opposition to moving Turkey 
toward Islamic rule. More than 700,000 pro-secular Turks demonstrated in 
Istanbul on Sunday, many of them women who believe political Islam would 
deprive them of personal freedoms and economic opportunities.


Secularists are deeply skeptical of the government despite its stated 
commitment to secularism, as well as reforms aimed at gaining membership to the 
European Union, because many ruling party members made their careers in 
Turkey's Islamist political movement. Erdogan once spent several months in jail 
after reciting an Islamic poem that prosecutors said had incited religious 
hatred.


The ruling party has advocated an eventual move toward a U.S.-style 
presidential system with a more powerful executive, adding to concerns about a 
president with an Islamist tilt.


In his remarks late Tuesday, Erdogan said he would push for a referendum if 
necessary on a constitutional amendment allowing the president to be elected by 
popular vote.


"If we cannot get the Parliament to choose a president, we will take this 
subject to the people and we will find a way to open presidential elections to 
our people," he said.


"With the decision of the Constitutional Court, the parliamentary democratic 
system has now been blocked," Erdogan added. "To get rid of this blockade and 
lift the rule of the minority over the majority, the only door to go to is the 
nation. Then, we are going to the nation."


Parliament, which since 2002 has been dominated by pro-Islamic politicians from 
Erdogan's ruling Justice and Development Party, elects the president in Turkey. 
In the first two rounds of voting, a candidate needs two-thirds of the 
lawmakers' votes to win, but by the third he needs only a simple majority.


The Constitutional Court ruled Tuesday that there were not enough legislators 
present during the first round of voting on Friday, and canceled the round. The 
opposition had boycotted the vote, depriving the ruling party of a quorum of 
two-thirds of lawmakers in the 550-seat Parliament.


"We've canceled the first round," court spokesman Hasim Kilic said. "Whether 
the Parliament will continue the vote or not, we can't know."


The Turkish stock market continued its slide Tuesday in reaction to the 
political upheaval, dropping 3.2 percent ahead of the Constitutional Court's 
decision later in the evening. The index had sunk 6.3 percent on Monday.


The bitter debate over the role of Islam in politics has exposed deep divisions 
in Turkey. Pro-secular groups say the ruling party, which came to power in 2002 
with 34 percent of the vote, did not have a strong popular mandate even though 
an electoral quirk gave it 66 percent of the seats in Parliament.


The showdown has also led to fears that the military could intervene and push 
the elected government out of power.


Those concerns were heightened Friday when the army released a statement saying 
it was watching the process with concern and reminded Turks that the army was 
"the absolute defender of secularism" and would act to prove it if necessary.


Asked by reporters about the military statement, Erdogan said Tuesday that such 
debate should be avoided.


"This would weaken our country's institutions and would cause the country to 
lose blood," Erdogan said. "If the blood loss starts, than its price could be 
heavy for our nation as it happened in the past."


In 1997, the military pushed the pro-Islamic prime minister, Necmettin Erbakan, 
out of power, sending tanks into the streets in a message that any concessions 
on secularism would not be permitted. It staged three other coups between 1960 
and 1980.


The founder of modern, secular Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, was an army 
officer who established the republic in 1923 after the collapse of the Ottoman 
Empire, giving the vote to women, restricting Islamic dress and replacing the 
Arabic script with the Roman alphabet. Wearing an Islamic headscarf, as Gul's 
wife does, is illegal in government offices and schools.


But Islam remains a powerful and attractive alternative for many Turks in this 
predominantly Muslim nation of more than 70 million.

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