Turkey's presidency vote annulled, PM calls for early election
Updated 8:35AM Wednesday May 02, 2007
By Hidir Goktas and Selcuk Gokoluk 
ANKARA - Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said today his government would 
seek an early parliamentary election on either June 24 or July 1 in a bid to 
break the current political paralysis.

Erdogan also told a televised news conference his ruling AK Party, locked in a 
dispute with secularist opponents over its choice of presidential candidate, 
wanted the Turkish people, not parliament, to elect the country's president.

He said the centre-right, Islamist-rooted AK Party wanted to reduce the term of 
parliament to four years from the current five years.

Turkey's Islamist-rooted government vowed to press on with presidential 
elections after the top court annulled the first round, but early parliamentary 
polls appeared increasingly likely.

The government's decision set the stage for another test of wills on Wednesday 
with Turkey's secularists, including the army that has threatened to intervene 
and sees itself as the final guarantor of the country's secular system.


The Constitutional Court annulled last week's first round vote in parliament 
after an appeal by the secularist opposition, which rejects the ruling AK 
Party's candidate, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, because of his Islamist past.
Government spokesman Cemil Cicek said parliament would hold another vote on 
Gul's candidacy on Wednesday but later a senior AK Party member, Sadullah 
Erdin, said no ballot would take place until a parliamentary committee had met 
to fix a new timetable.

"The situation has become so confused," said Semih Idiz, a veteran columnist 
for the liberal Milliyet daily newspaper.

Turkey's financial markets recorded their biggest falls in a year on Monday and 
the currency lost more ground on Tuesday, as concern grew about possible 
instability after an anti-government rally of up to one million on Sunday and 
the army's threat.

Istanbul violence

Earlier on Tuesday, riot police fired teargas and used water cannon to break up 
crowds of leftist May Day protesters in Turkey's largest city and business hub 
Istanbul but the violence was not directly linked to the presidential standoff.

The Constitutional Court ruled not enough parliamentarians were present when 
the first round vote was held in the 550-seat assembly last week.

Gul said if, as expected, the government again fails to ensure the required 
quorum of 367 legislators, or two-thirds of the chamber, Turkey would have to 
call early national elections. The AK Party has 352 deputies.

Under ballot rules, Gul is the only presidential candidate and no one else can 
be nominated now the process is under way.

Secularists suspect Erdogan and Gul, both former Islamists whose wives wear the 
Muslim headscarf banned from state institutions, of wanting to break Turkey's 
strict separation of state and religion.

They reject the charge and point to their pro-Western record in office.

The army has ousted four governments since 1960, the last in 1997 when it acted 
against a cabinet in which Gul served.

Economy Minister Ali Babacan said Turkey, which has a $400 billion economy, was 
ready for early elections -- a comment widely seen as an attempt to calm 
markets.

On Monday, Erdogan went on national television to appeal for national unity in 
a clear attempt to ease the confrontation.

Parliament elects the president for a seven-year term.

The dispute stems from a divide between Turks who want to keep a strict 
separation of state and mosque and a growing more religiously minded class who 
have prospered under Erdogan and want a relaxation of curbs on religious 
symbols and expression.

- REUTERS

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