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Turkey's Erbakan Back on Political Stage

Erbakan announced that he will run as an independent candidate for the Turkish Parliament elections

Additional Reporting By Saad Abdel Maguid, IOL Turkey Correspondent

ANKARA, August 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan, announced Thursday, August 22, that he will run as an independent candidate for the Turkish Parliament elections in snap polls in November.

The 76-year-old veteran threw his support behind the opposition Saadet (Felicity) Party, the successor of his Welfare Party which was banned in 1998 for undermining the secular system of the mainly Muslim nation.

"The Saadet Party is the solution towards salvation... Voting for Saadet is voting for Turkey's future," Erbakan told a press conference.

He accused mainstream parties of selling out national interests to the West and said economic woes plaguing Turkey were the result of a Western plot to devastate the country, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.

His speech was frequently interrupted by bursts of applause from party supporters, who chanted "Mujahedeen Erbakan" and "Erbakan for Prime Minister."

Erbakan became Turkey's first Islamist premier in 1996 but was forced to resign only after a year in office as a result of a harsh secularist campaign led by the powerful Turkish military, AFP said.

The constitutional court outlawed his Welfare Party in 1998 and banned Erbakan from politics for five years. Welfare's successor, the Virtue Party, was also banned in 2001 on the same grounds.

The party then split into two groups, the Saadet Party, which many say is run by Erbakan behind the scene, and the moderate Justice and Development Party (AK), which rejected Erbakan's heritage.

The AK party, which says it has learned lessons from the past and is seeking to recast itself as a pro-Western conservative centrist movement, is currently leading opinion polls with about 20 percent of the vote.

Erbakan is widely expected to challenge his political ban, which ends next year, and stand in the election as an independent candidate.

Although he was sentenced to imprisonment by court for embezzlement, which prevents him from being elected as a deputy, Erbakan nevertheless hopes to become an independent deputy as the Court of Cassation is yet to approve the verdict. 

 

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