Turkish party builds base on social work
The ruling AKP's community programs and devoted cadres give it an edge in the 
July vote, despite a secular backlash.

By Laura King, Times Staff Writer
May 17, 2007 


ISTANBUL - Meral Gurgun and her family, economic refugees from Turkey's 
impoverished rural heartland, were in deep trouble. 

When they arrived five years ago in the rundown, densely populated Bagcilar 
district of Istanbul, her husband could find only the most menial jobs. Far 
behind on their rent, they struggled to find money for the children's school 
fees. The electricity was cut off again and again. 

Until the day a short, rumpled woman in sensible shoes knocked on their door 
and asked how she could help. 

"She was such a friend and sister to me," said Gurgun, whose careworn face made 
her look older than her 38 years. "Without her, I don't know how we could have 
survived." 

The family's savior was Beyhan Ayci, a volunteer from the local branch of the 
ruling Justice and Development party, known by its Turkish initials AKP. She 
got the power turned back on, arranged for subsidized school fees, helped work 
out payment of back rent.

In sprawling urban districts such as Bagcilar, where daily life centers on 
rural migrants' efforts to climb out of poverty, party activists such as Ayci 
have helped cement voter loyalty, block by neighborhood block.

As Turkey embarks on what probably will be the country's most divisive and 
hard-fought election campaign in years, the AKP's brand of community activism 
could prove a decisive factor - in part because it reflects a formidable 
organizational structure that the more secular-minded opposition parties can 
only envy. 

The party - an outgrowth of Islamist political groups that were banned - is 
fighting a fierce backlash from the opposition, whose constituency is rooted in 
Turkey's traditional secular elite of civil servants, judges, university 
professors, military men and the old-money establishment. 

For the last month, secular Turks have taken to the streets by the tens of 
thousands, voicing fears that the AKP, despite pledges to the contrary, will 
seek to erode the country's constitutionally mandated separation of Islam and 
government. 

But the AKP fully expects to prevail in the July 22 parliamentary elections, 
largely by dint of its grass-roots appeal. In style if not in religious 
principle, its approach echoes the classic model of Islamist parties such as 
Hezbollah and Hamas - a mix of charity work, municipal boosterism and 
well-oiled political machinery. 

Party officials say that in Istanbul alone they have 120,000 neighborhood-based 
volunteers who will now turn their attention to getting out the vote. 

"We'll knock on a million doors," said Oczan Unlu, a spokesman at the AKP's 
Istanbul branch headquarters. "And then a million more. And a million more." 

Reflecting the party's tight internal discipline, the AKP has been more 
successful than others in getting its supporters to cast ballots. Although the 
opposition has been able to organize huge anti-government street rallies over 
the last month, it is less confident of translating that into votes. 

When the election date was being decided, secular-minded parties said they 
would be disadvantaged by a July vote, because many of their supporters would 
be on seaside holidays.

Election officials are still trying to agree on rules to govern television 
advertising during the campaign, but it is expected to be sharply restricted, 
making personal contact and door-to-door appeals more important. 

The AKP, sometimes referred to as "AK," which means white or clarity, has 
another common bond with Islamist parties elsewhere: an image of fiscal 
integrity that has proved a valuable asset at the ballot box. Public fury over 
corruption among more secular Turkish parties helped propel the AKP to power in 
2002, when it secured a comfortable parliamentary majority. 

Although the July election is viewed by many as a referendum on the role of 
religion in public life, the contest has blurred many of Turkey's traditional 
political and social distinctions. 

The AKP, like its Islamist precursors, once appealed almost exclusively to the 
rural poor, but as the Turkish economy has boomed under its stewardship, the 
party's religiously conservative power base has become better educated and more 
urbanized, and gained economic clout.

Those changing fortunes can be seen in districts such as Bagcilar. Once a 
thinly populated area between Istanbul's city center and its international 
airport, it was transformed almost overnight into a slum as migrants began 
pouring in from the countryside three decades ago.

But in the years that the AKP has been in power, Bagcilar has been transformed 
yet again. The party-run municipal government embarked on a campaign to build 
the area's infrastructure - paving roads, constructing parks and playgrounds, 
laying water mains. The district recently opened its first public swimming pool 
- with gender-segregated hours, because religiously observant men and women 
would not want to mix. 

At a gleaming rehabilitation center opened three years ago by the municipality, 
a physical therapist in an Islamic head scarf talked softly to a young mother 
while together they manipulated the limbs of 2 1/2 -year- old Ramazan, who has 
cerebral palsy. 

"Before the AKP, there was no facility like this, where disabled children could 
get quality medical care for free," said Ayfes Bakis, one of the center's 
administrators. 

The district's effervescent leader, Feyzullah Kiyiklik, a veteran of several 
banned Islamist parties, said community work, and not religion, would continue 
to be the party's mainstay. 

"If someone wants to accuse us of having a hidden agenda, an Islamist one, we 
can't change their minds by force," he said. "We can only do our work - and 
there is so much work to do." 

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