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ANKARA: The 'Majority' Complex

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  • ANKARA: The 'Majority' Complex

    THE 'MAJORITY' COMPLEX
    Yusuf Kanli

    Turkish Daily News
    Jan 21 2008
    Turkey

    Having a majority does not mean having the right to remove main
    pillars of a system

    The prime minister is definitely right in getting outraged with the
    "memorandum-like" statements coming from the judiciary. Rather than
    issuing "preemptive statements" the judiciary should concentrate on
    the issues in front of itself. What the chief prosecutor of the Supreme
    Court of Appeals and the Council of State did separately last week were
    very much in tune with the "preemptive strike" mentality introduced
    to modern state administration jargon by U.S. President George W. Bush.

    If there is a violation of the Constitution; if the fundamental
    principles of the constitutional order of the country are being
    eroded; if there is a "counter revolutionary" activity, than it is
    the duty of the chief prosecutor of the Supreme Court of Appeals to
    investigate and if there are sufficient reasons demand the required
    judicial punitive action against those individuals, groups or parties
    engaged in such activities.

    To say the least, issuing such veiled threats and implying that he may
    open a closure case with the Constitutional Court against the ruling
    party or one of the opposition parties in Parliament is incompatible
    with the notion of justice. Yes, in a country where punishment of
    intentions has become a routine practice, perhaps such developments
    can be considered as "normal," but are not we in efforts to leave in
    the past such bad habits anyhow...

    That being said, however, the reaction of the prime minister to the
    statements coming from these top two courts demonstrated once again the
    obsession of our government with the "turban business" and its lack of
    interest in the promotion of overall individual rights in the country.

    The prime minister, whose outburst the other week that he could not
    understand how a prime minister could be sentenced to a three kurush
    (about two cents) fine in compensation for describing our fallen heroes
    as "heads," now went a step further and declared that the legislative
    and the executive branches could not be moderated by the judiciary.

    While in essence he was right and in a working democracy the three
    powers - the legislative, executive and the judiciary - should not try
    to dominate each other but at the same time neither the legislative
    nor the executive can consider themselves immune from the judiciary
    or superior to the judiciary.

    Democratic governance of a country requires cohesive functioning of
    these three powers. That is why in describing our republic we say
    "pluralist, democratic state adhering to the principle of supremacy
    of law."

    The prime minister must understand that the psychology of "I have
    almost two-thirds of Parliamentary seats; I received 46.7 percent
    of the votes in the elections so I have the right to govern the
    country the way I like" is not compatible with democracy. Even if a
    party receives 90 percent or an even higher percentage of the votes,
    there are fundamental principles and pillars of every country that
    the political administration cannot touch.

    Having parliamentary majority does not mean having the power to remove
    main pillars of a system. Insisting on such policies, unfortunately,
    may prove too costly...

    Farewell to Koryurek

    Saturday was the first anniversary of the murder of our friend
    and colleague Hrant Dink. He was felled last year by Islamofascist
    terrorism. Over 10,000 people attended a demonstration in front of
    his Armenian-Turkish Agos weekly to reiterate their demand for justice
    and repeat their indignation with the failure of the Turkish state to
    capture and bring to justice those who masterminded the heinous murder.

    Before the end of that sad day, unfortunately, we heard of yet another
    murder; this time the news was about an elder brother, a colleague
    who was felled by traffic terrorism.

    Cuneyt Koryurek, the dean of athletics news in the Turkish media,
    a man of integrity and dignity was hit by a car while trying to walk
    across Harbiye Avenue in Istanbul's ªiºli quarter and lost his life.

    He was 77 years young.

    The entire media was grieving Sunday the death of Koryurek. But for
    us at the TDN, his loss was nothing less than losing a part of our
    history. Koryurek was the designer of the original gothic logo of
    the TDN when the paper started its publication life on March 15, 1961.

    He was a friend, an elder brother and a much-respected colleague.

    The Turkish media will miss him. May Allah let him rest in peace.

    --Boundary_(ID_z6hd3PqpELP5V4NYglomew)--
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