Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: PM: Some circles want to slow down Ergenekon crackdown

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: PM: Some circles want to slow down Ergenekon crackdown

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 18 2008


    PM: Some circles within the state want to slow down Ergenekon
    crackdown

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan acknowledged yesterday that some
    circles within the state body were disturbed by an operation against
    Ergenekon, a shadowy and illegal crime organization some of whose
    members were arrested in a recent police crackdown.

    Erdoðan spoke on ATV's "Agenda with the prime minister" TV program..
    "We have a problem here. There are some segments in the state willing
    to slow down this process [the crackdown on Ergenekon]," said
    Erdoðan. The prime minister vowed that his government would do its
    best to uncover the connections of Ergenekon in the state. He said
    the Ergenekon investigation had already begun and would continue
    until the gang is fully exposed. He claimed that his government has
    been the country's most courageous to date and has shown a strong
    determination in dealing with gangs.
    When asked whether recent attacks on non-Muslims in Turkey -- the
    killing of a Catholic priest in Trabzon in 2006, the murder of ethnic
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink by an ultranationalist youth in 2007
    and a brutal attack on three Christians missionaries in Malatya last
    April -- were the work of the Ergenekon gang, he replied: "Judicial
    processes in all these incidents are still in progress. When they are
    concluded, we will find out together."

    Erdoðan also dwelled on arguments brought up by some media outlets
    surrounding "neighborhood pressure" -- the suggestion that allowing
    covered students to attend university would cause pressure on others
    to don headscarves. He accused some media institutions of inviting
    pressure by bringing up such arguments to the agenda. "We see that
    some media organs attempt to show a few provocative incidents as
    being common all around the country," he said. In reference to
    several news articles that recently appeared in some newspapers with
    provocative headlines as examples of neighborhood pressure, Erdoðan
    described them as scenarios frequently used in the past. "When you
    uncover the background of such provocative incidents, you realize
    they are nothing more than provocation," added the prime minister.

    Cautioning the public about ongoing debates over removing a headscarf
    ban on university campus, Erdoðan called on people to be vigilant
    about provocative acts. He also directed harsh criticism at some
    media outlets for adopting a provocative stance on the elimination of
    the headscarf ban. "We are aware that certain media outlets exert
    their utmost effort to drag the country into an atmosphere of chaos.
    We receive necessary intelligence about their acts," he said.

    Underlining that some circles are trying to spark a war between
    covered and uncovered women, Erdoðan noted: "Both covered and
    uncovered women live in the same family. There are women who do not
    wear a headscarf in my family, too. We are living in peace and
    fighting together against injustice. I see all of them as my sisters,
    no matter whether they cover their hair or not. Our country does not
    have a regime problem."

    Erdoðan also criticized Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz
    Baykal -- who in a recent speech dropped hints he will challenge the
    constitutional amendments approved on Feb. 9 by Parliament to lift
    the headscarf ban at the Constitutional Court -- saying: "Prior to
    the July 22 polls, he used to claim that he would solve Turkey's
    long-standing headscarf problem. But today we see that he resorts to
    every option to block the resolution of this problem."

    Without mentioning his name, Erdoðan also slammed Hürriyet daily
    Editor-in-Chief Ertuðrul Özkök, who in one of his columns criticized
    the amendments to lift the headscarf ban at universities because he
    saw the move as the "despotism of the majority."

    "They ignore democracy and show 411 hands (the number of deputies who
    voted in favor of the reform) as having voted for chaos. I cannot
    support such an expression. It means making fun of the deputies,"
    Erdoðan stressed.

    Noting that there have always been discussions regarding the regime
    in Turkey, Erdoðan reiterated that his party is not based on
    religion. "We do not seek to establish a religious state. We said
    this when we first established our party. Some circles keep
    reiterating the same thing. They used to say Turkey would be a
    religious state even when I was elected mayor of Ýstanbul years ago.
    I have been active in politics for very many years. Have they seen
    even the slightest inclination to this end?" he asked.

    Erdoðan also touched upon a planned amendment to Article 17 of the
    Higher Education Board (YÖK) Law. "We will kick off work on Article
    17 of the YÖK Law after the Constitutional Court publicizes its
    decision on the constitutional amendments, if the CHP challenges
    them," he added.

    18.02.2008

    Today's Zaman Ýstanbul

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X