-Caveat Lector-

From

from the October 16, 2002 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/1016/p06s02-woeu.html

Turkey faces an Islamic challenge

An Islamically influenced party is expected to win 30 percent of the vote in Turkey's 
Nov. 3
elections.

By Ilene R. Prusher | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

ISTANBUL, TURKEY - Turkish elections are just over three weeks away, and the country's
hottest politician is ... not even in the race.

Not officially, anyway. Last month, an electoral board ruled that Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
head of the Islamically oriented Justice and Development Party (AKP), was ineligible 
to run
because he was convicted of sedition in 1998.

But Mr. Erdogan's meteoric rise to popularity does not appear to be losing steam. On 
the
contrary, the party he founded last year on the ashes of the Islamist Welfare Party,
disbanded in 1997 by Turkey's secular establishment, seems only to have gained 
supporters
since the Supreme Electoral Board ruled he was unqualified to run.

The decision to ban Erdogan and three other controversial figures from running for 
office
comes at a particularly sensitive moment – a time when Turks are reeling from an
economic crisis, trying to win entry into the EU, and grappling with Washington's 
plans to
attack their neighbor, Iraq.

The US will need Turkey, a NATO ally, for both political support and the use of air 
bases for
a strike against Iraq. But popular backing here for a war against Iraq is almost 
nonexistent
– and a government run by the AKP looks likely to be even less inclined to support US
action.

Erdogan, charismatic and not yet 50, stands out among other politicians: Average Turks 
see
him and the party he built as clean, conservative, and concerned with the little guy. 
He says
he is now focused on reforming the country's ailing economy and winning a place for
Turkey in the European Union (EU). But his conviction four years ago stemmed from a 
rally
at which he spoke with jihad-type undertones. He read from a poem which included the
lines: "The mosques are our barracks, the domes our helmets, the minarets our bayonets
and the faithful our soldiers."

Now, Erdogan sits at the helm of the AKP, which pollsters predict will be the big 
winner next
month, raking in about 30 percent of the vote – up from about 25 percent when Erdogan
was actually in the race.

But what role Erdogan will play is a mystery that people around Turkey are trying to
decipher.

"The problems are going to start from Minute One, because as head of party and as a
shadow prime minister, Erdogan will have to play this game of someone else running the
government," says Dr. Ilter Turan, a political science professor at Istanbul Bilgi 
University.

A number of issues have propelled Ergodan's party toward the top. Foremost among them
are the state secularism that some feel has gone too far – such as banning women in
Muslim headscarves from official government offices and universities. Moreover, 
middle-of-
the-roaders and people fed up with older political parties may be turning to AKP 
precisely
because the ban on Erdogan's candidacy has given him an aura of a beleaguered underdog.

And, unlike some of Turkey's parties that have been built around the magnetism of one
leader and by wearing the mantle of Islam, AKP has far more than Erdogan behind it. 
"This
is a party with a whole leadership cadre – one man does not mean the end of the party,"
adds Turan. "They are well- organized and they know how to reach the masses."

When Motherland, a pro-business party, has a $1000-a-head fundraising dinner at the
Sheraton, he points out, the AKP has a picnic with grilled kebabs. More than any 
other, the
party has built up a reputation for helping the struggling working class.

AKP and their predecessors in the Welfare Party, for example, have made a tradition of
organizing mass circumcision parties and group weddings for people who cannot afford to
have a party that dignifies the occasion.

Semra Senturk, going from poor to poorer in Turkey's recent economic crisis, could 
never
have afforded to throw a big bash for her 8-year-old son's circumcision this summer. 
But
thanks to Islamist politicians who started holding such events free of cost, 
municipalities
around Istanbul now provide the service.

As such, voters like Mrs. Senturk are tilting heavily in favor of the AKP.

"I just want to give them a chance. I trust Erdogan. He was very good when he was the
mayor," says Senturk, as her son – one of 270 boys who benefited from the district's 
mass
circumcision ceremony this summer – peeks around the doorway with his cousin. As she
stands at the door of her home, a partly subterranean slice of painted cement wedged 
into
the tight line of ramshackle rowhouses that fill the Kustape neighborhood of Turkey's
capital, she clutches a spray bottle of cleaning fluid in her daily fight to beat back 
poverty's
grime.

"We've already seen what the other politicians have done," she sighs, "which is 
nothing."

Among those who have joined the list of AKP's top candidates for election include 
economic
reformers, people who want Turkey to be integrated into the European Union, and women
who don't wear Islamic headscarves, AKP leaders are quick to point out.

"We established a new political party. Definitely we are trying to be good Muslims, 
because
we believe in that, but that is on an individual level," says Abdullah Gul, the 
party's deputy
chairman and the man most likely to serve as prime minister while Erdogan wields power
from behind the scenes. The idea of having a more Islamic nature to public life in 
Turkey is
something "we think is not realistic anymore," he adds.

AKP leaders say they would prefer to be known as a party which will fight corruption, 
heal
Turkey's ailing economy, and help guide it into the European Union, which it sees, in 
part,
as its ticket to greater freedom of religious expression. One group of women waiting
outside a local council office on a recent afternoon to make sure they were registered 
to
vote say they plan to vote for the AKP to end discrimination against religious women. 
They
wear headscarves, which are not allowed in government offices or universities.

"I have a daughter who is 10 years old, and I have to send her to religious education
secretly," says Cevriye Carkci. "We have to send her to an unofficial school. If we are
caught, they will shut it down," she says.

Erdogan won't be forced to wait in the wings forever. After the elections, a parliament
dominated by the AKP could vote to change the law that has allowed the election board 
to
keep Erdogan from running. By next February, analysts say, they could call new 
elections
that would allow Erdogan to be prime minister.

"So what they say is, once the parliament convenes, they want to change the 
Constitution,"
says Ilnur Cevik, the editor of the Turkish Daily News in Ankara.

"He says he is the hero of the 'silent millions,' " says Cevik. "If he is not the 
prime minister,
it will be awkward."

Full HTML version of this story which may include photos, graphics, and related links



Copyright 2002 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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