ANKARA,
Aug 4 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Powerful far-right Turkish
leader Devlet Bahceli plans to appeal to the country's top court to
block newly adopted reforms considered vital to Ankara's bid to join
the European Union, news agencies reported Sunday, August 4, 2002.
Bahceli
and his Nationalist Action Party (MHP) are vehemently opposed to two
of the reforms - the abolition of the death penalty and legalization
of language courses and broadcasts in Kurdish - on the grounds that
they would harm Turkey's unity.
"I
have asked my colleagues to make preparations to apply to the
constitutional court to annul the abolition of the death penalty as
well as education and broadcasts in one's mother tongue," Bahceli
said, the Anatolia news agency reported Sunday, according to Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
The
legislation adopted by Turkey's parliament on Saturday, August 3,
2002, after a marathon session is essential to Ankara's hopes of
obtaining a date for the start of accession talks with the European
Union (EU) by the end of the year, when the 15-nation bloc draws up
its enlargement calendar.
The
new measures will become law once signed by the President and
published in the official gazette, both expected to happen soon.
EU
supporters were keen to push the legislation through after parliament
last week agreed to bring elections forward to November 3, in a bid to
end months of political turmoil triggered by Prime Minister Bulent
Ecevit's ill health and a rift in his coalition government over the
reforms.
The
United States gave its support for the overwhelmingly Muslim but
officially secular nation to join the EU. Turkey already belongs to
NATO and is a key strategic ally of both the U.S. and Israel.
The
reforms were adopted despite a bitter fight by the MHP - a partner in
the three-party coalition and now the largest party in parliament
after a mass defection from Ecevit's Democratic Left Party.
The
MHP believes improved Kurdish cultural rights will play into the hands
of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which led a 15-year armed
campaign against Ankara for self-rule, and rekindle ethnic unrest in
the mainly Kurdish southeastern part of the country.
It
also wants to see PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, on death row for
treason, executed rather than allowed to serve out a life sentence.
Dozens of other people on death row are also still alive since a
moratorium on executions was put in place in 1984.
Both
issues are highly controversial in a nation that has been traumatized
by the loss of more than 36,000 lives in the conflict.
"Those
who have competed with each other to save [Ocalan] from the punishment
he deserves have done evil to this country," Bahceli told party
supporters in the central Anatolian province of Kayseri.
The
reforms will "dynamite Turkey's national unity and
existence," he charged.
For
his part, Ecevit, battling to keep power after the government lost its
majority in parliament, on Sunday urged the EU to set a date for
accession negotiations, saying Turkey had fully complied with its
demands.
"Turkey
has fulfilled all the (EU's) political criteria with the package and
will implement the reforms. No one can claim otherwise," Ecevit
said. "Turkey now expects full membership from the EU as soon as
possible."
The
77-year-old five-time Prime Minister was forced into calling the early
election after ignoring calls to resign over his ill health, absenting
himself from official duties while the country battles its worst
recession in half a century.
The
European Union, which is expected by 2004 to admit another 10 members
out of 13 candidate countries, welcomed the democracy package, but
stressed that it would keep a close eye on their implementation.
There
are fears among EU supporters that Turkey, the laggard of the 13
hopefuls, will see its bid postponed indefinitely if it fails to
obtain a date for the start of accession talks by the end of the year