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ANKARA: Significant Number Of Turks Have Secularism Concerns

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  • ANKARA: Significant Number Of Turks Have Secularism Concerns

    SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF TURKS HAVE SECULARISM CONCERNS

    Hürriye
    May 20 2008
    Turkey

    Turkey's leading business leader criticizied critics and commentators
    who see the current impasse as an "establishment's resistance," saying
    significant segment of Turkish people have concerns over secularism.

    "There are those who see the current impasse solely in terms of an
    entrenched establishment's resistance to and fight with the forces
    of democratization. This would be a grave oversimplification of the
    present situation,"

    Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association's (TUSIAD)
    chairwoman, Arzuhan Dogan Yalcindag, said last week in a speech
    delivered at 38th St. Gallen Symposium in Switzerland.

    Turkish public's view on Islamist-rooted AKP is divided as
    some decisions of the ruling party creates question marks over
    secularism. However foreign reporters and officials define the conflict
    in Turkey as a "power struggle between secular establishment, including
    army and judiciary, and newly emerging conservatives."

    "Although it is true such a resistance exists, the concerns of a
    significant segment of our population over the issue of secularism
    or about an infringement on their lifestyles cannot be dismissed out
    of hand," Yalcindag added according to her speech text published on
    TUSIAD's website Monday.

    "I see this crisis and the worrying polarization in our politics as a
    reflection of a deeper conflict that inflicts the global community. In
    other words the dislocations caused by integration with global
    capitalism, the shift in the relative power of social groups, generate
    reactions and lead to fierce struggles between winners and losers. In
    our case the language of that struggle is that of secularism."

    Turkey's top prosecutor filed an indictment against the ruling
    AKP claiming the party had become the "focal point of anti-secular
    activities" in March. The prosecutor also asked for the banning from
    politics of 71 members of the party including the prime minister and
    the president. The Constitutional Court is reviewing the case and is
    expected to rule on the matter within the next few months.

    --Boundary_(ID_Vy7t8nWu6d8WduMYVrJ5aQ)--
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