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WSWS : News
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East : Turkey
Turkey: Political allies of military move to unseat moderate
Islamist government
By Sinan Ikinci
4 June 2007
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Last week the leadership of the Republican Peoples Partys
(CHP) publicly announced that its election strategy to unseat
the ruling moderate Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP)
would be based on criticisms of government corruption and the
practice of parliamentary immunity. According to the declaration,
the CHP leadership and its temporary ally, the Democratic Left
Party (DSP), will emphasise that the AKP has failed to deal with
these two closely interlinked issues, although they promised the
opposite to the Turkish electorate before the 2002 national elections.
Recently Cevdet Selvi, deputy leader of the CHP, gave an interview
to the Turkish Daily News and maintained that Turkeys
most important problem is corruption, and the fight against corruption
should begin by stripping the immunity enjoyed by parliamentarians.
Selvi said, We are going to explain to our people during
the election campaign that removing immunity will be the first
thing we will be doing once we come to power. All our candidates
gave the party a written statement that reads, Remove my
immunity if I enter parliament. This is the policy of CHP.
In addition to Selvis remarks, someone from the top echelons
of CHP told the TDN that, Baykal and Sezers [Zeki
Sezer, leader of DSP, which recently decided to form an election
bloc with CHP] first success is achieving a long-awaited unity
on the left. They will build their strategy on that and we will
attack the ruling AKP for their failure in tackling corruption
and removing immunity. The two leaders launched their joint
campaign on May 26 with a rally in Mersin, a large city on the
Mediterranean coast of southern Turkey.
Articles 83 (parliamentary immunity) and 84 (loss of membership)
of the constitution grant immunities to the members of parliament,
thus they cannot be arrested, interrogated or taken to trial unless
there is a decision by parliament to strip a lawmaker of this
immunity. Before the 2002 elections, almost all political parties,
including the AKP, promised to narrow the scope of immunity for
parliamentarians. However, in the four and half years since the
AKP became the ruling party with a comfortable majority in parliament
it has not taken any initiative on this pledge.
Evidently, the AKP leadership drew the lessons from recent
history realising that immunity might protect it from attacks
targeting the party and enabled it to maintain an absolute majority
in parliament. As Gurcan Kocan from Istanbul Technical University
and Simon Wigley from Bilkent University correctly explained in
2005, Given the shutdown of its predecessor conservative
parties, the Welfare Party (Refah Partisi, RP) in 1998 and the
Virtue Party (Fazilet Partisi, FP) in 2001, and the four-month
imprisonment of its leader Tayyip Erdogan in 1999 for an allegedly
seditious speech, the AKP will argue that it has good reason to
fear the consequences of narrowing the immunity, even if that
appears to contradict its anti-corruption stance. From their point
of view, curtailing immunity based on public concerns over corruption
might only serve to play into the hands of the secular establishment.
(Democracy and the politics of parliamentary immunity in
Turkey, New Perspectives on Turkey, no. 33 (2005): 121-43.)
The AKP government was elected in November 2004 with 34 percent
of the vote, a large enough margin to form a single-party government.
It lost some of its base after establishing close relationships
with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and implementing far-reaching
austerity measures on behalf of big business. Despite this, the
government still enjoys a measure of public support because of
the discrediting of the official secular parties and its relative
success in stabilizing the countrys financial situation,
after 30 years of uninterrupted high inflation. Recent polls show
that the AKP enjoys the support of 25 to 30 percent of the electorate.
This level of support makes it very difficult to topple an elected
government via an outright military intervention and that is why
Turkeys mainstream secular parties are launching an anti-corruption
campaign to remove it.
Coming from these long-standing bourgeois parties charges of
illicit government activity are hypocritical, to say the least.
For decades both right- and left-wing versions of
these parties ruled the country through coalition governments
well known for pervasive corruption. Needless to say, the AKP
government has not been totally free from corruption; however,
its actions are no more egregious than its predecessors.
At first sight the focus on such narrow issues seems quite
bizarre when the country has been virtually paralyzed by a months-long
political crisis, with repeated talk of a possible military coup,
including a letter threatening the AKP government issued by the
military on April 27.
Contributing to this deepening crisis are significant problems
and risks accumulating in the economy. The unemployment rate continues
to be very high despite successive reports of high rates of economic
growtha direct product of speculative capital inflows. If
significant international economic shocks take place Turkey could
be plunged into an acute debt crisis, given its unsustainable
current account deficit, which surpassed 8 percent of the GDP
last year. Such a financial crisis would immediately turn into
an overall economic crisis as it did in February 2001.
Neither the CHP nor any other bourgeois party has any means
to prevent such a scenario, let alone resolve the intense social
problems that confront masses of working people. Whatever the
form of the government that will take shape after the July 22,
2007 national electionswhether it is led by a right-wing
or nominally left-wing bourgeois partyit is
guaranteed to pursue the same anti-working class austerity measures
as those demanded by the IMF, the World Bank and the European
Union.
The CHPs anti-corruption campaign highlights the crisis
of all of the bourgeois parties in Turkey, which, like their counterparts
throughout the rest of the world, are unable to maintain a mass
base of popular support, particularly as they carry out the demands
of the global financial market for the dismantling of existing
social reforms. Under these conditions the CHP has increasingly
rested on sections of the military and functioned as its mouthpiece,
particularly since top generals signalled their plans for a new
military intervention last August.
The CHPs campaign is an organic part of the ongoing fifth
military episodeafter the military coups in 1960, 1971 and
1980 and the ouster of the Erbakan government in 1997. It is a
calculated move to intensify the attack of the secularist
campled by the militaryagainst the AKP, which, in
the face of the reactionary policies of the secular bourgeois
parties still enjoys a large measure of popular support.
A few months ago the leader of the fascist National Movement
Party (MHP), Devlet Bahceli, explicitly warned that if Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted on becoming the next president,
a regime crisis could evolve and the country could
end up in interim governance. He went even further
and threatened the AKP by saying that the next parliament would
carry out a treason inquiry against Erdogan to remove
him. He has repeated these threats several times over the last
few weeks. It is unlikely that Bahceli initiated these threats
alone. There are strong historical links between the fascist MHP
and top military generals.
More evidence that such a strategy is taking shape to destabilize
the AKP was provided by the retired diplomat, Radikal columnist
and new MHP candidate Gunduz Aktan. Aktan recently wrote, The
AKP should stop the election of the president without having consensus.
If they want a solution for the partys problem with the
regime they should select parliamentary candidates accordingly.
The AKP should declare that they recognize the Turkish identity
as the supra-identity. If it is laic as they claim, the party
should prove by word and action that they adopt all the elements
in the 24th article of the Constitution. Otherwise, it will lose.
Besides election and military coup, there are other ways to lose,
not objected to by the West...
Aktans comments leave no room for doubt. What he wrote
perfectly matches with rumours about preparations for a court
case to close down the AKP for good, if the military finds this
essential. Another option is taking the leaders of the AKP to
court for existing or new cases. These two tactics are not mutually
exclusive and could be used against the AKP simultaneously.
On the very same day the CHP declared that corruption and immunity
will be its major campaign themes, Anatolia news agency reported
that a prosecutor has launched a probe into claims of corruption
during the presidential election process in parliament, which
have been put forward by the CHP.
Just before and after the first round of voting for the new
president in parliament, Baykal and Motherland Party (ANAVATAN)
leader Erkan Mumcu claimed that their deputies were offered money
in return for attending the parliamentary session. Moreover Baykal
said earlier that a businessman and a very close friend of Erdogan
offered money to some of the CHP deputies-i.e., tried to bribe
them.
There are pending lawsuits against many of the AKP leaders,
including Erdogan and Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, which have
been postponed until the end of the parliamentary term. Removing
immunity would certainly open the way for eliminating the leaders
of the AKP through court cases.
During the last couple of days there was a debate over swimsuit
advertisement bans in Istanbul. According to the news reports,
swimsuit manufacturers have prepared billboard advertisements
for the approaching summer season, which were turned down by the
Istanbul municipality controlled by the AKP. The media reacted
fiercely, with Vatan asking, Will this become a land
of the mullahs, like Iran?
A spokesman for the municipal government denied the ban was
for religious reasons, claiming the AKP was concerned with protecting
the aesthetics of the city and preventing distractions
that could cause traffic accidents. Istanbul, after all,
is a historical city, Ahmet Faruk Yanardag told Reuters,
adding, We have to make sure these photos are placed in
appropriate places for advertising purposes, he said.
Several papers also mentioned that all these accusations have
already been included in a dossier the public prosecutors
office has submitted to the countrys highest court as evidence
against the AKP. The German magazine Der Spiegel wrote,
There are rumours in Ankara, Sabah writes, that the
investigation could even lead to proceedings to ban the AKPa
dream for their opponents, perhaps, but not likely ever to happen.
Der Spiegel misses the point. The strategy of the military
and its civilian supporters is clear: remove the immunity protection,
take the leaders of the AKP to court and close down the party
if necessary.
See Also:
Turkey: Constitutional Court
stops presidential election
[3 May 2007]
Political tensions increase
as Turkish presidential elections approach
[16 April 2007]
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