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  • Move to ban ruling Turkish party

    Move to ban ruling Turkish party

    BBC
    15-03-2008 10:20:32 - KarabakhOpen

    Turkey's chief prosecutor has asked the Constitutional Court to ban the
    governing AK Party, accusing it of anti-secular activities.
    Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya said he believed that there was enough evidence
    to show the party had been contravening Turkey's secular constitution.

    The AK Party, which has Islamist roots, won last year's general
    elections.

    So any move to close it will be extremely controversial, the BBC's
    Sarah Rainsford in Istanbul says.

    Headscarf controversy


    The AKP is already locked in a battle with Turkey's secular elite,
    backed by the powerful military, over recent changes on the headscarf
    issue.

    The Constitutional Court is reviewing an appeal by the main pro-secular
    opposition party on the validity of parliament's constitutional
    amendments in February to allow women wear Islamic headscarves at
    universities.


    The scarf reform has prompted major controversy in Turkey

    The AKP has argued that the headscarf ban unfairly bars large numbers
    of girls from higher education in a nation where about 66% of women
    wear the scarf.

    Many secularists in the country equate the wearing of the headscarf
    with political Islam.

    In a surprise announcement, Mr Yalcinkaya, the chief prosecutor at the
    Court of Appeals, said he had filed a court request for the closure of
    the AKP.

    He also revealed that the party had been under investigation for six
    months.

    Speaking on Turkish television later on Friday, an AKP lawmaker said he
    was shocked at the news.

    The lawmaker said that senior party officials and lawyers were now
    holding an emergency meeting in the capital Ankara.

    The AKP has its roots in an Islamist party that has been banned.

    But the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan - which is
    negotiating for Turkey to join the EU - has always insisted that its
    political views have changed.
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