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EU Sees True Reformist In Turkey's President

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  • EU Sees True Reformist In Turkey's President

    EU SEES TRUE REFORMIST IN TURKEY'S PRESIDENT
    Thomas Seibert, [email protected]

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/2008121 2/FOREIGN/544159767/1135/NEWS
    Dec 12 2008
    United Arab Emirates

    December 11. 2008 10:50PM UAE / December 11. 2008 6:50PM GMT ISTANBUL
    // As the reform drive of Turkey's government has slowed almost to
    a halt, the EU has been looking to Abdullah Gul, the president, as
    the true supporter of change in Ankara, fuelling speculation about
    a growing rift between Mr Gul and his friend Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    the prime minister.

    Mr Gul used his traditional message on the Eid al Adha festival
    on Monday to hammer home his core messages that Turkey needs more
    reforms to improve living conditions for all its citizens and that
    the country is strong enough to solve its inner conflicts, ranging
    from the Kurdish question to tensions between religiously conservative
    and secular groups.

    "We are trying to lift standards in every respect in our country and
    turn it into a state that is more respected around the world and into
    an affluent society," the president said in his statement. "Turkey
    is the representative of a civilisation formed by values like
    accepting differences as richness, peace, love, tolerance and
    brotherhood. Everyone who lives in this country as an equal citizen
    is a partner in the country's future, not only the past."

    As a prime minister from late 2002 until he was replaced by his
    political ally and long-term friend Mr Erdogan in March 2003 and as a
    foreign minister from 2003 until 2007, Mr Gul made a name for himself
    as the driving force behind many political reforms that pushed Turkey
    closer to membership in the European Union.

    "We will take steps that will shock the EU," Mr Gul famously announced
    after his Justice and Development Party, or AKP, came to power in
    Nov 2002 and kicked off a series of reforms that led to the start of
    membership talks between the EU and Turkey in 2005.

    Mr Gul's election to the presidency last year, however, sparked bitter
    protests from secularists and also weakened the AKP's reformist wing.

    With Mr Gul no longer in the cabinet, there is no one left in the
    government with enough clout to keep Mr Erdogan on the reform track,
    observers said.

    "We wish he was still in government ensuring balance during these
    critical times," the English-language newspaper Hurriyet Daily News
    and Economic Review quoted an unnamed senior EU official as saying
    about Mr Gul last month.

    There is a marked difference between the pro-European image Mr Gul
    still enjoys in Brussels and the perceived sluggishness of the reform
    process under Mr Erdogan.

    "While the new president played a positive role by calling for further
    political reforms, the government did not put forward a consistent
    and comprehensive programme of political and constitutional reforms,"
    the EU said in a major report on Turkey's progress as a candidate
    for membership last month.

    As president, Mr Gul is a largely ceremonial head of state who has
    little concrete political power and who has largely to rely on speeches
    and symbolic steps to influence events.

    On his first trip after becoming president last year, he visited
    Turkey's Kurdish region, signalling the importance he attaches to
    solving the Kurdish conflict that has led to the death of tens of
    thousands of people in a war between Kurdish rebels and the Turkish
    army since 1984. He wanted to spend this year's Eid al Adha in the
    Kurdish region but was prevented from doing so by an ear infection,
    his office said.

    In September, Mr Gul became the first Turkish president to visit
    neighbouring Armenia, thereby starting a cautious process of
    rapprochement with Yerevan. Press reports said he is planning a trip
    to Iraq this month.

    For all his initiatives, Mr Gul has not succeeded in winning over his
    secular critics. The main opposition party as well as the strictly
    secular leadership of the armed forces have limited their contacts with
    the head of state to a minimum. For them, Mr Gul is an Islamist who
    should not be in the office once occupied by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
    Turkey's founder. The fact that Mr Gul's wife, Hayrunnisa, wears the
    Islamic headscarf is one of the reasons for the rejection.

    This summer, Turkey's chief prosecutor asked the constitutional court
    to ban Mr Gul from active politics along with Mr Erdogan and dozens of
    other leading AKP politicians. The court narrowly rejected the demand.

    Mr Gul and Mr Erdogan share a religiously conservative outlook and
    years of co-operation in the AKP, and the president still refers to
    the prime minister as a personal friend. But differences between the
    two politicians have become more pronounced recently.

    "The European Union addresses its idea that Turkey has not delivered
    the expected reforms to Gul, whereas a sector [of society] that
    believes the EU efforts are not urgent and even pose a danger
    to national security and the immediate future of the country has
    intensified its contacts with the government," Mehmet Ali Kislali,
    a columnist, wrote in the daily Radikal.

    The Kurdish conflict has also become an issue where Mr Gul and Mr
    Erdogan seem to be at odds. The president has been stressing the
    need for more democracy to solve the long-running problem, while Mr
    Erdogan has been seen to take a much tougher line in recent weeks,
    telling an audience last month that everyone who did not agree with
    the idea of national unity could "go where they please".

    Turkish media have said there is a growing coldness between the
    president and prime minister.

    "It has been noted that the pair that used to meet very often in
    the past has even found reasons to cancel their weekly meetings,"
    which are part of the routine between the head of state and the head
    of government, the Milliyet newspaper reported last week.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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