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Gul Must Stand Trial In Fraud Case: Court

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  • Gul Must Stand Trial In Fraud Case: Court

    GUL MUST STAND TRIAL IN FRAUD CASE: COURT

    Peninsula On-line
    http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_n ews.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Gulf%2C+ Middle+East+%26+Africa&month=May2009&file= World_News200905197054.xml
    May 19 2009
    Qatar

    ANKARA: A Turkish court ruled yesterday that President Abdullah
    Gul (pictured), should stand trial for a fraud case a decade ago,
    a move that could fuel further animosity between the Islamist-rooted
    government and the secularist establishment.

    As president, Gul enjoys immunity. But the pursuance of an old case
    involving millions of dollars of missing party funds could heighten
    tension in the European Union candidate country.

    Turkey's ruling AK Party has long been at loggerheads with the
    secularist establishment, including army generals, judges and
    academics.

    The decision by an Ankara heavy penalty court, that ran counter to
    a no-trial recommendation by a prosecutor, came as a surprise and
    traders said the news briefly reversed a buying trend in the Turkish
    market, fuelling sales in Turkish bonds.

    "It is the rule in the Turkish Republic's constitution and laws that
    everyone should stand trial," the court ruled.

    Gul's office rejected the court's ruling, saying that the constitution
    allowed the president to be put on trial only for treason.

    A court of appeals now will have the final say.

    "It doesn't look like Gul's future is at stake anywhere in the short
    term but the secularist opposition could try to use this to create
    noise and discredit the government," said Wolfango Piccoli from
    Eurasia Group think-tank.

    "Accusations of corruption might bite where accusations of undermining
    secularism didn't bite," he said.Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    and his AK Party have been accused of corruption by the secularist
    opposition who could use the case as fresh ammunition against a party
    they bitterly oppose and accuse of harbouring a hidden political Islam.

    The AK Party, which swept to power after the collapse of traditional
    parties in 2002 following corruption allegations and economic
    mismanagement, has rejected charges of graft.

    Political passions are already running high in Turkey over a separate
    investigation into an alleged right-wing group accused of plotting to
    overthrow the government. Some hardline secularists see it as part
    of a strategy to break the power of military and courts and promote
    Islamist rule.

    The AK Party ended the traditional parties' decades-old grip on power
    when it swept into government with a huge majority in 2002. A failed
    2008 court attempt to close the AK Party plunged Turkey into political
    chaos and hurt markets.

    The fraud case dates back to the late 1990s, when the Islamist Welfare
    Party, a predecessor to the AK Party, was accused of misappropriating
    funds from the Treasury.

    Former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan, who was pushed out with the
    help of the military in 1997 on accusations he pursued an Islamist
    agenda, was found guilty five years ago for the same fraud case. Gul
    pardoned him last year.

    Critics accuse the AK Party, which embraces centre- right elements
    and nationalists as well as religious conservatives, of violating
    Turkey's secular principles. The AK Party denies this and points to
    economic successes and liberal political and economic reforms aimed
    at bringing Turkey into the EU.

    Gul, like Erdogan, denies any Islamist ambitions. He is highly regarded
    in Europe where, as foreign minister, he steered the country into
    membership negotiations. As a loyal deputy to Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan, Gulserved briefly as prime minister when the AK Party swept
    to power in the November 2002 general election. Erdogan was barred
    from standing in that election because of a previous jail conviction
    for reading an Islamist poem. Erdogan became premier in March, 2003.

    Gul became the first Turkish leader ever to set foot in neighbouring
    Armenia last September, when, at the invitation of his Armenian
    counterpart, he flew to Yerevan to watch his national side play
    Armenia in a World Cup qualifying match.

    The match heralded a fresh start in relations between Armenians and
    Turks that have been marred by hostility for nearly 100 years.
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