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Ecevit bows to pressure, calls early elections |
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ISTANBUL, 17 July — Ailing Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit
made a major U-turn yesterday and agreed to call early elections in
November in a bid to end the political turmoil set off two months ago by
his deteriorating health and subsequent refusal to step down. “The three chairmen (of the coalition parties) have unanimously
agreed on holding early general elections on Nov. 3,” read a brief
statement issued after Ecevit’s talks with Devlet Bahceli of the
far-right Nationalist Action Party (MHP) and Mesut Yilmaz of the
center-right Motherland Party (ANAP). The government will now submit to
Parliament a proposal for elections to be held in November when
lawmakers convene for an extraordinary session on Sept. 1. The decision came after the left-right coalition lost its majority in
Parliament when six more MPs resigned from Ecevit’s Democratic Left
Party (DSP), the latest to quit in a weeklong mass exodus. The
government now has only half the seats it originally occupied in the
550-member assembly. Ecevit had said he would resign if his government lost its majority
but yesterday showed no sign of doing so. The coalition must now muster
support from the opposition who argue that November is too late. “This
government has already lost its legitimacy, why should we wait until
November,” said Abdullah Gul, deputy head of the Islamist AK party. The decision marked a U-turn for Ecevit who had insisted that polls
would not be held before they were due in 2004. His nationalist partner
and coalition heavyweight Bahceli has been lobbying for November
elections for several days. By agreeing to November polls, Ecevit may be
hoping to stay at the coalition helm until then. But it is unclear whether Ecevit is strong enough, physically and
politically, to join forces with the opposition to rush through
Parliament a series of key human rights reforms sought by the European
Union before its December summit if Turkey is to begin accession talks
next year. A delay would be a huge setback to Ankara’s long-standing
bid to join the EU. His nationalist partners are deeply suspicious of
Europe, and opposed to legislative changes which include lifting all
restrictions on Kurdish language education and broadcast as well as
abolishing the death penalty. The decision will undoubtedly please the opposition, which has
persistently urged snap polls to end the political stalemate, triggered
by Ecevit’s absence from office since early May due to ill health, and
a government deadlock on reforms required under Turkey’s bid to join
the European Union. But they have all come up with different dates for
polls ranging from “as soon as possible” to spring next year. Ecevit, 77, had earlier rebuffed the calls on the grounds that early
elections would cost Turkey time when the country is battling its worst
recession in years and trying to advance its struggling bid to join the
EU. But his own coalition partners had openly voiced backing for early
elections towards the end of the year. And in a major blow to his tattered coalition, six more legislators
resigned from the DSP yesterday, joining a mass rebellion in protest at
Ecevit’s insistence on staying at his post. The defections left the
coalition with only 275 of the 550 seats in Parliament. Ecevit, a
five-time prime minister, said last week that he would quit if his
government lost its hold over the 550-seat legislature, but had cast
doubt on those remarks in a newspaper interview published yesterday. Financial markets and the weak Turkish currency, battered by more
than two months of political turmoil, recovered yesterday as
investors’ confidence was boosted by what they saw as a sign of a
breakthrough in the crisis. (The Independent) |