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Secular Turkey Protests Against Hijab

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  • Secular Turkey Protests Against Hijab

    SECULAR TURKEY PROTESTS AGAINST HIJAB

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    04.02.2008 13:36 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Thousands of secularist Turks took to the streets on
    Saturday, February 2, against government plans to lift a decades-long
    ban on hijab on campus, warning the lift could undermine Turkey's
    secularism.

    "Turkey is secular and will remain secular," shouted protesters
    as they waved Turkish flags and banners of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
    the emblematic leader who threw religion out of public life as he
    rebuilt Turkey from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

    "We are concerned that universities will plunge into a chaotic
    environment and opposing groups will start clashing with each other,"
    Professor Mustafa Akaydin, the chairman of the oversight board at
    Ankara's Middle East Technical University, said in a statement.

    Reuters reported.

    The ruling Justice and Development Party and the far-right Nationalist
    Action Party (MHP) opposition party have agreed a constitutional
    amendment to allow a compromise headscarf on campus. Under the deal
    between the two parties, women and girls at universities are permitted
    to cover their heads by tying the headscarf in the traditional way
    beneath the chin.

    A majority of women use the traditional "basortusu" - head cover in
    Turkish - that is more or less loosely knotted under the chin for
    protection against the elements or for modesty. It can come off just
    as easily as it can be tied on and raises no objections.

    But the ban would remain on the wrap-round headscarf, which secularists
    claim is associated with political Islam, as well as face-veil.

    Together, the AKP and the MHP easily have the two-thirds parliamentary
    majority required to amend the constitution. The Turkish parliament
    is expected to approve the amendment this week.

    According to Director of Institute of Oriental Studies at the RA
    Academy of Sciences, Dr Ruben Safrastyan, the Turkish bill permitting
    to wear hijabs proves consolidation of Islamic spirit and deviation
    from the ideas promulgated by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of
    the Turkish secular state. "It's quite possible that the restrained
    statement by Turkish military, who guarantee the Ataturk Constitution,
    is conditioned by a kind of agreement sealed by the AKP and the
    General Staff on "disclosure" of Ergenekon," the Armenian expert said.
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