BLOWBACK

My party is good for Turkey

A member of the Justice and Development Party says his country deserves advanced democracy.
By Egemen Bagis
March 24, 2008
» Discuss Article    (37 Comments)

In self-proclaimed Turkey expert Soner Cagaptay's "Turkey changes, by the numbers," distorted allegations about my party and my country only deserve the famous quote, "lies, damn lies and statistics."

Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party, known as the AK Party, won about half the total electorate's votes in the general election only seven months ago on a progressive, liberal, democratic, pro-market and pro-European Union platform. Our legitimacy and our democratic credentials are as solid as the Statue of Liberty.

Turks have been Muslims for about 1,300 years. This happened long before the AK Party government.

We are only upgrading the country's democratic standards against those who believe that the nation does not deserve an advanced democracy. The parliament's vote for allowing head scarves at universities is nothing but securing basic individual freedoms for female students who have been treated as third-class citizens and banned from universities for their religious garb.

Now I, along with my party, am facing a five-year ban from politics, to be followed by various trials.

As for the AK Party's credentials, EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said, "In a normal European democracy, political issues are debated in parliament and decided in the ballot box, not in the courtroom. ... It is difficult to see that this lawsuit respects the democratic principles of a normal European society."

Similarly, Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said the AK Party government was made up of "profound European reformers" and that the prosecutor's action "takes the concept of the bizarre application of laws to astronomical heights." He added, "We all know there are those who are trying to break things down and have extremely exaggerated, extremely inflated fears for the future of the secular character of Turkish society."

Contrary to Cagaptay's distorted statistics, many Turks support the U.S. One recent poll found that 58% of Turks think the U.S. image has improved in Turkey since Washington started providing intelligence for Turkish military operations against the PKK terrorists in northern Iraq. Turks always appreciate and reciprocate friendship.

Cagaptay's claim that Turkey is closer to Iran, and then citing that only 28% of Turks have a favorable view of that country, shows what a farce that figure is. Then where's the remaining electorate?

Let me give you the breakdown: Fifty percent is our current electoral support, and if our party is banned, 62% is the minimum vote we'll get in the first election afterward.

Egemen Bagis is vice chairman of the Justice and Development Party and a member of the Turkish parliament representing Istanbul.




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Should the Justice and Development Party be banned? Discuss today's Blowback.

Comments will close after two weeks.
 
1. SAS, I can only laugh at your thread. "Jewish and Christian rights have been expanded." Are you kidding? What happened then to Hrant Dink? Wasn't he killed for expressing his views as a Christian, Turkish-Armenian? What about that Italian priest who were killed by an ultra-nationalist? Is this how AKP "expands" freedoms? Your thread is a joke....
Submitted by: Ercan Aksu
2:01 AM PDT, Mar 30, 2008
 
2. First, AKP should be banned. For more information, please read Robert Ellis' fantastic response to Egemen Bagis dated 28 March 2008. Secondly, he is an advisor to a PM, who repeatedly stated that Turkish families should have at least 3 kids. The rest of the world is trying to promote birth control and create educated societies, whereas PM Erdogan and AKP believe that "the more the merrier." I wish we had a smaller but richer, more educated population today.
Submitted by: Ercan Aksu
1:59 AM PDT, Mar 30, 2008
 
3. AKP is hiding behind democracy just like Hitler did. Prime Minister and head of AKP Mr. Erdogan' following words were quoted in Turkish newspapers word by word: " Democracy is like a train. We get on it, and once we reach our destination, we will get off" When he was the mayor of Istanbul, Mr. Erdogan said that, in Islam it was permissible to "lie" in order to bring Sharia (Islamic law). He is now in that stage of lying in order to ultimately create another Iran out of Turkey.
Submitted by: Yasa Ataturk
4:46 PM PDT, Mar 29, 2008
 



The senator's Berlin speech was radical and naive.

   
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