Arab Times

Panel clears draft expanding Erdogan’s power

Parliament to debate plan in January ‘Returning jihadists will be arrested’

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ANKARA, Turkey, Dec 30, (Agencies): A Turkish parliament­ary commission on Friday cleared a set of draft constituti­onal amendments that would greatly expand the powers of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan will be able to appoint and dismiss government ministers, take back the leadership of the ruling party, and govern until 2029 under plans approved by a parliament­ary commission on Friday.

The approval by the constituti­onal commission after a 17-hour overnight session means the plans for an executive presidenti­al system, long sought by Erdogan and the ruling AK Party he founded, have passed their first hurdle.

The proposal will now go to a vote in parliament’s general assembly, before a referendum expected by spring.

Erdogan and his supporters argue that Turkey, a sometimes turbulent country of 79 million people, needs the strong leadership of an executive presidency to prevent a return to the fragile coalition government­s of the past.

Erdogan has already turned a largely ceremonial presidency into a powerful platform, drawing on his unrivalled popularity, but opponents fear the reform will fuel authoritar­ianism in the NATO-member and EU candidate country.

Turkey is already under fire from Western allies over its record on rights and freedoms, especially after widespread purges in the wake of a failed military coup in July.

The reform will give the president full executive power, enabling him to appoint and dismiss deputy presidents and ministers, as well as top state officials. Contrary to the current system, the head of state will also be allowed to maintain ties to and lead a political party. Erdogan renounced the leadership of the AKP, which he founded a decade and a half ago, when he won the presidency in 2014 but still retains strong influence over it.

According to the draft, the president will also have the authority to declare emergency rule, which currently requires parliament­ary approval. Turkey has been under emergency rule since the weeks following the failed putsch on July 15.

AKP sources said party lawmakers had been told in a written note that the draft would be debated in the general assembly in January, including at weekend sessions if needed. If approved, a period of 60 days must pass before holding a referendum.

The AKP needs the backing of the nationalis­t MHP opposition to push through the legislatio­n. Constituti­onal Tunisian Defence Minister Farhat Horchani (left), greets Health Minister Samira Merai (right), and Minister of Foreign Affairs Khemaies Jhinaoui (C)

during a council of ministers meeting in Tunis on Dec 30. (AFP)

TUNIS, Dec 30, (RTRS): Returning Tunisian militants will be immediatel­y arrested and judged under anti-terrorism laws, the prime minister said, seeking to calm fears over the homecoming of some of the country’s several thousand jihadists.

Tunisia is among the countries with the highest per capita number of militant Islamists, a problem linked to widespread radicalisa­tion among disillusio­ned youth and a loosening of security controls after Tunisia’s 2011 uprising.

More than 3,000 Tunisians are known to have travelled abroad to wage jihad, according to the interior ministry. Last week, the interior minister said 800 had already come back to Tunisia, without giving details on what had happened after their return.

Prime Minister Youssef Chahed said returnees would be dealt with according to a 2015 anti-terrorism law that is designed to ease the arrest and prosecutio­n of suspected

change needs the support of at least 330 deputies in the 550-seat assembly to go to a referendum. The AKP has 316 deputies eligible to vote and the MHP 39, though a few have voiced opposition to the reform.

The plans foresee elections in 2019

militants. “Those who come back will be arrested immediatel­y after their arrival on Tunisian soil and will be judged under the anit-terrorism law,” Chahed told state TV late on Thursday.

He also said authoritie­s had comprehens­ive records on militants who had left the country. “We have all the details on them, we know them one by one, and we have taken all the necessary measures,” he said.

The comments by Chahed, a member of the secularist Nidaa Tounes party, came amid a fierce political debate over how to deal with foreign fighters. Some secularist politician­s have called for them to be stripped of their nationalit­y, though the right to citizenshi­p is protected under the constituti­on.

Politician­s from the Islamist party Ennahda, part of the governing coalition, have said Tunisia is still responsibl­e for returning militants and that the government cannot prevent them from coming back.

and a maximum of two five-year terms, meaning Erdogan could rule until 2029.

The main opposition CHP and the pro-Kurdish HDP had sought to block the draft, arguing that it amounted to a fundamenta­l change in the country’s political system.

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