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Gul Closest to Become New Turkish Prime Minister

Abdullah Gul

Additional reporting by Saad Abdul Majid, IOL Turkey Correspondent

ANKARA, November 10 (IslamOnline) - Deputy chief of Justice and Development Party (AK), Abdullah Gul, is agreed upon to be the party's nomination for the new Turkish Prime Minister, as the party's leader, Receb Tayyib Erdogan, is banned from holding the post, sources close to the AK told IslamOnline Sunday, November 10.

"Gul is the only choice, agreed upon, (by AK figures), to be Premier, as long as Erdogan will not be able to hold the post, due to the legal ban," the sources said.

Erdogan was banned from contesting the polls Monday, November 4, which the AK overwhelmingly won, becoming in a position to form the government alone. The AK won 363 seats in the parliament, out of 550.

Gul is one of the most important intellectual characters behind the AK's plans to rule Turkey. He enjoys a wide economic experience, as he worked in the Islamic Development Bank in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, from 1983 to 1991.

Gul held several posts, such as the official in charge of international relations with the two Islamic parties al-Rafaah and Virtue, both were banned. He was also Minister of State for Islamic Affairs in the coalition government, led by Islamic leader Nigm Edden Erbakan, from 1996 to 1997.

Meanwhile, Turkish daily paper Yeni Safak, reported that the AK is trying to enter some key constitutional amendments, in a bid to enable Erdogan from holding the post of Prime Minister.

Article 109 of the Turkish constitution states that the Premier must be an elected member of parliament. The AK seeks to amend it into " all Turkish citizens have the right to the post". Erdogan was banned from contesting the last elections because of a political ban, due to a 1999 charge of "inciting religious hatred".

Also AK seeks to amend article 76 which bans "any citizen to be a member of parliament if he was charged due to participation in ideological actions (speeches, rallies…etc), even if he was pardoned later.

The expected amendment, according to the Turkish paper, would make it a "participation in any terrorist actions".

Deniz Baykal

Meanwhile, the secularist opposition in Turkey's new parliament voiced support for the lifting of legal barriers that keep Erdogan from becoming a Prime Minister, a Turkish newspaper reported Sunday.

Republican People's Party (CHP) chairman Deniz Baykal told the Milliyet daily that Erdogan deserved to become Prime Minister after the landslide victory of his AK.

"The election outcome shows that this is the will of the people," he said.

Baykal, who has long denounced political bans, suggested that parliament amend the constitutional article that makes Erdogan ineligible for parliamentary membership.

A by-election could then be held to get Erdogan into parliament and open the door for his premiership, he told Milliyet.

Baykal, however, said the amendments should be part of a broader reform package, which should also restrict the judicial immunity Turkish MPs enjoy and shorten the parliament's legislative term from five to four years.

Baykal's CHP, which won 178 seats, was the only other party that made it to parliament. Independent candidates claimed the remaining nine seats.

In a rare show of solidarity, the two parties have pledged to cooperate closely on foreign policy matters after the new parliament is formally inaugurated next week.

 

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