Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara: PM Thanks Baykal But Asks Him Not To Give Messages Through M

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

  • Ankara: PM Thanks Baykal But Asks Him Not To Give Messages Through M

    PM THANKS BAYKAL BUT ASKS HIM NOT TO GIVE MESSAGES THROUGH MEDIA

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Tuesday, October 13, 2009

    ANKARA - Daily News Parliament Bureau

    Prime Minister Erdogan responds to CHP leader Deniz Baykal's letter. AA
    photo

    Prime Minister Erdogan responds to CHP leader Deniz Baykal's letter. AA
    photo

    Correspondence between leaders of the ruling party and the main
    opposition is likely to produce a key meeting next week regarding
    the ongoing efforts to solve the Kurdish question and end terrorism.

    The prime minister also made a statement about Republican People's
    Party, or CHP, leader Deniz Baykal's letter inviting him to a
    face-to-face meeting on the condition that it be aired on television.

    "To me it's a positive step. We'll elaborate (the invitation for a
    meeting)," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday at his
    party's parliamentary group meeting. Addressing Baykal's six-page
    letter, the prime minister said: "I am currently not in the position
    to evaluate the content of this letter. We'll do it when we meet. But
    I have said I do not want to say anything about the content of the
    letter to the media. I hope Mr. Baykal will agree," Erdogan said.

    In the letter, Baykal addressed a 2007 meeting held with Erdogan
    and former Chief of General Staff Gen. YaÅ~_ar Buyukanıt. The prime
    minister alluded to a comparison made by Baykal.

    "I believe the comparison is wrong," Erdogan said, adding that meetings
    between prime ministers and generals are often misunderstood. "The
    new meeting will be different. Each of us will make statements after
    the meeting," he said.

    Erdogan said Parliament would discuss the matter further in an
    open session in the coming weeks. "We are not talking behind closed
    doors. We will share any developments with the public. We do not want
    to run the process secretly," he said.

    Baykal, in his address to parliamentary lawmakers Tuesday afternoon,
    described the meeting as historical and crucial. "I am aware of this
    fact. I wish the pr istakes to his face. I will disclose all of what
    you have on your mind," Baykal said.

    Recalling that he had expressed his concerns in his letter sent to
    Erdogan, Baykal denied that "the meeting will be the one in which
    Erdogan informs the main opposition about the motives of the move. Why
    do you hide your road map from the public? The CHP will not help you
    disguise your road map," he said.

    Baykal said his condition for the meeting was that it "was not the
    sort of reunion that could be kept secret from the people. We'll
    kindly welcome Mr. Prime Minister and we'll show all our respect to
    him at our headquarters."

    Bahceli slams CHP

    The correspondence between Erdogan and Baykal seems to have disturbed
    the Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, which has been most vocal
    against the government-led Kurdish initiative. "Mr. Baykal is about
    to become the Prime Minister's co-pilot on his journey to destroy the
    unity of the country. The troika of destruction will be established
    with Mr. Baykal's participation in the process," MHP leader Devlet
    Bahceli said in an address to his party.

    "Recording the meeting will not save Mr. Baykal," he said.

    On the other hand, the leader of the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society
    Party, or DTP, repeated his call to Baykal to fully back the Kurdish
    initiative. "We want Baykal to leave his fear-based policies behind,"
    he said in Parliament. Turk also said it was the right time to consider
    submitting essential constitutional amendments for consideration
    by referendum. "We need a comprehensive amendment to this current
    Constitution. That's the only way to make the country more democratic,"
    he said.

    PM calls for softer rhetoric

    Criticizing the Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, for the language
    it used against the ruling party, the prime minister asked all parties
    to embrace "a more contributive approach in the new legislative year."

    "Let's make this legislative year a year of dialogue, democratic
    maturity, and good relations. A democratic soci uld have dialogue
    and consensus. It must tolerate different opinions. You cannot shake
    clenched fists," he said.

    Erdogan said some people continue to benefit from the ongoing
    terrorism in the country and that it is an issue that is hindering the
    government's efforts to solve the problem. "We have begun a journey to
    stop what is happening regarding terrorism. We will succeed. Though
    terror has its own economy, new democratic initiatives will disrupt
    it."

    Armenian move slammed as well

    The signing of the historical protocols with Armenia was also on the
    agenda of the opposition parties.

    "Wouldn't we be at a different point today if the Minsk Group
    had spent the same amount of energy on solving Nagorno-Karabakh
    as it did on trying to open the border between Turkey and
    Armenia?" Baykal said. Criticizing the government for putting the
    ball in Parliament's court, he said: "It's far from sincere. Did you
    sign the protocols? Yes, you did, so why are you now changing your
    course?" asked the main opposition leader.

    Bahceli, for his part, reiterated that his party would never support
    such a move until the problems with Azerbaijan are solved by an
    Armenian withdrawal from occupied Azerbaijani territories.
Working...
X