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Lawmakers in Turkey Back Coalition Rule : Politics: Vote on re-formed government ends six weeks of crisis that nearly toppled Premier Tansu Ciller.

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Prime Minister Tansu Ciller won a broad vote of confidence in her new coalition government Sunday, ending six weeks of political crisis.

The Parliament voted 243 to 171 to accept the re-formed government made up of Ciller’s conservative True Path Party and Deniz Baykal’s socialist Republican People’s Party. The right-wing National Action Party also backed the coalition.

“Ciller and Baykal make a good marriage,” said a senior Western diplomat in the Turkish capital, Ankara. “We’re pretty positive about what’s been going on. They accomplished a lot of things before the vote of confidence. Turkey is finding its real self.”

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The nail-biting crisis since the previous coalition collapsed Sept. 20 almost toppled Ciller, 49, a U.S.-educated professor of economics who entered politics in 1991.

Ironically, the past two weeks have seen the passage of more significant pieces of legislation than the preceding four years. Laws on patents, copyrights, decentralization and human rights have been pushed through the Parliament.

Much of the work is angled to obtain the European Parliament’s approval of a vital customs union. The United States and major European Union governments strongly back the deal to bind this country of 65 million people to the Western system. But European lawmakers have demanded more reforms in Turkish human rights.

“I said we’d do the best we could do. It is not a cosmetic change. We will see many people in prison liberated according to the change in the law,” Ciller said last week. “Knowing what I have been through, it almost looks like a miracle.”

More than 150 people are incarcerated under laws limiting freedom of expression in Turkey, most convicted of alleged support for Kurdish separatism. The Foreign Ministry says more than 25 people have already walked free since the government retroactively softened a notorious article of Turkey’s anti-terrorism law on Oct. 26.

Ciller’s next hurdle is a constitutional challenge to the new government’s plan to hold national parliamentary elections Dec. 24. Most parties are so far assuming the voting will go ahead.

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Several well-known senior bureaucrats, including key security chiefs, the head of the Treasury and the Central Bank governor, have all resigned to join Ciller’s party.

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