Turkey's
new president receives cold military reception
By
Hande Culpan
AFP
ANKARA
Petroleumworld.com
08 30 07
Turkey's staunchly secularist army chiefs refused
Wednesday to salute the country's new Islamist-rooted president Abdullah Gul
on his first full day in office.
Gul had an easier time in his second engagement of the day when he approved the
new government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, of whose party he was
a member until he was elected head of state by parliament on Tuesday.
The 56-year-old president joined army chief Yasar Buyukanit and other top generals
at a graduation ceremony at the military's prestigious GATA medical academy.
Buyukanit accompanied Gul inside and the president cordially shook hands with
top commanders, but the army chief and several other generals pointedly failed
to give the customary salute to Gul as they mounted the podium to present diplomas
to graduates, the NTV news channel reported.
As president, Gul is also commander-in-chief of the armed forces.
He attended the ceremony without his wife Hayrunnisa, whose Islamic-style headscarf
is seen by many here as flouting the secular nature of the republic, enshrined
in the constitution.
Gul, who was foreign minister for the past five years, was elected president
in a parliamentary vote over the strong objections of army-backed hardline secularists
because of his past in political Islam.
After his election victory, Gul pledged to remain impartial and true to the country's
secular fabric.
Army brass, senior members of the judiciary and top academics snubbed the ceremony
in strong sign that they are not happy with his presidency.
The military was a major player in the campaign that blocked Gul's first bid
for the presidency in April, plunging the country into turmoil and triggering
snap general elections on July 22.
When Erdogan's Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) first nominated
Gul in April, the opposition boycotted the vote and the army warned that it could
intervene to defend the secular system.
The AKP, the conservative offshoot of a now banned Islamist party, won the election
comfortably and saw in the result popular approval for Gul's presidency.
The AKP has disawoved its Islamist past and says it is now fully committed to
secularism.
Since first coming to power in 2002, it has secured the start of membership talks
with the European Union and presided over strong economic growth.
But hardline secularists suspect the AKP of harbouring ambitions to undermine
the separation of state and religion and fear that with Gul at the presidency
and party members at all the top posts, the way has been paved.
In a conciliatory message to the army, Erdogan called for unity for the greater
good of the country.
"I would like to once again emphasise that we need more than ever to set
our differences aside and unite around the values of our nation, the tenets of
the Republic and our common targets," read Erdogan's statement, issued to
mark August 30 Victory Day.
Erdogan later met Gul and secured approval for his new 25-member cabinet, including
outgoing members and newcomers with no past in political Islam.
"Our aim in the new term will be to work for more freedoms and prosperity," Erdogan
told reporters after the meeting.
Ali Babacan, economy minister in the previous government and Turkey's chief negotiator
in European Union membership talks, was named foreign minister to succeed Gul
and retains the chief negotiator's post, Erdogan said.
Among the newscomers are Ertugrul Gunay, a prominent social-democrat who was
appointed minister of culture and tourism, and Trade and Industry Minister Zafer
Caglayan, former head of the Ankara Chamber of Industry.
The new government, which was to hold its first meeting on Wednesday, is expected
to easily win a vote of confidence in the AKP-dominated parliament next week.
AFP 29 1615 GMT 08 07
Copyright© 2007
AFP.
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