Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Leader retakes party control

- FIRAT KOZOK AND BENJAMIN HARVEY Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by staff members of The Associated Press.

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday took back control of the ruling party he founded, a step that gives the nation’s most powerful man additional authority to appoint loyalists to parliament lists and party posts across the nation.

Just a month after a vote approved transferri­ng Turkey’s center of political power to the presidency from parliament, the Justice and Developmen­t Party’s leadership and tens of thousands of party faithful convened to anoint Erdogan at a congress in Ankara. The referendum’s result allowed the president, until then constituti­onally an impartial head of state, to be a member or leader of a political party.

A new set of party regulation­s includes stiffer penalties for breaking discipline, and expulsion for anyone who acts in a way perceived as serving the purposes of another party, Hurriyet newspaper reported.

The congress took place under high security because of a state of emergency that’s been in place since the aftermath of a July 15 coup attempt. Some 60,000 people were brought into Ankara by bus from outside the city, Hurriyet reported. By 9:30 a.m., security forces could be seen using pepper spray against masses of supporters who had congregate­d outside the arena and were fighting to get closer.

Erdogan, 63, founded the Justice and Developmen­t Party in 2001 as a conservati­ve, free market-oriented, Islam-inspired political movement that was an alternativ­e to the longtime domination of rigid secularist­s — the successors of modern Turkey’s founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk. The party swept to power in an election the next year, winning almost two-thirds of the seats in parliament with just 34 percent of the vote.

Since then, the party has lost its commanding majority in the legislatur­e just once, in June 2015. The elections were repeated five months later during an upsurge in violence and an inability of opposition parties to form a coalition government. Leaders of the main pro-Kurdish party, whose boost in support was instrument­al in stripping the Justice and Developmen­t Party of its ability to rule alone after that election, were later jailed on terrorism charges.

In a speech to business group Tusiad last week, Erdogan said Turkey needed to keep its rate of economic growth at 6 percent or higher, which is more than double the average forecast of economists in Bloomberg surveys for this year. He also said Turkey would keep the state of emergency in place as long as needed.

In a nearly two-hour speech at the congress, Erdogan highlighte­d 15 years of economic achievemen­ts and attributed any democratic shortcomin­gs to threats from terrorist organizati­ons. He again rejected calls for the removal of the state of emergency, known as Ohal in Turkish, which allows him to rule by decree.

“It’s not going to be lifted,” he said. “Are your factories not working? Are the schools closed? Why should the Ohal be lifted?”

Some 150,000 people have been swept up in purges since the coup attempt, including academics, journalist­s and opposition politician­s who’ve been jailed for months without trial. Last week, arrest warrants were issued for four people, including the owner, at one of the nation’s last remaining opposition newspapers, Sozcu, which has a secularist-nationalis­t bent. They were accused of working with the Islamic group that Erdogan says was behind the failed coup — the movement of exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen.

Changes made to the party’s central board, the Central Decision and Executive Council, included the addition of pro-government businessma­n Ethem Sancak, whose group of companies includes defense interests and media outlets, according to Aksam newspaper. Ministers Veysi Kaynak and Mehmet Muezzinogl­u were dropped, along with Saban Disli, a party coordinato­r for economic affairs, and Yasin Aktay, the party spokesman.

Changes to the Cabinet could be made within a couple of days, Haberturk TV cited Justice and Developmen­t Party Deputy Bulent Turan as saying. The replacemen­t of 19 of 50 central board members signals that 20 percent to 30 percent of the Cabinet could also be replaced, said Mustafa Elitas, another deputy.

Erdogan will present his return to the party as the start of a new era for Turkey, but the country’s economic and political outlook has deteriorat­ed, according to Wolfango Piccoli, co-founder of Teneo Intelligen­ce in London. The change may usher in a Cabinet shuffle in which appointees are named based on loyalties rather than talent, he said.

“Erdogan has achieved a long-held dream of establishi­ng a presidenti­al system where the president faces little, if any, checks and balances on his power,” Piccoli wrote in a report on Turkey. “The [Justice and Developmen­t Party] has gradually become Erdogan’s personal vehicle while losing its way and vision.”

Meanwhile, Turkey’s staterun news agency says two people suspected of being members of the Islamic State extremist group have been killed in an Ankara police operation.

 ?? AP/BURHAN OZBILICI ?? Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife, Emine Erdogan, throw carnations toward supporters Sunday during a congress of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party in Ankara, Turkey.
AP/BURHAN OZBILICI Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife, Emine Erdogan, throw carnations toward supporters Sunday during a congress of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party in Ankara, Turkey.

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