Turkish Daily News, 96-06-22
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 22 June 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Ciller and Erbakan near government deal
[02] Jordan speaks up for Turkey, undermines Syrian accusations
[03] Turkey's presence in Florence is considered 'forward step'
[04] OECD says Turkey needs strategy to avert instability
[05] Turkish submarines in Malaysian waters
[01] Ciller and Erbakan near government deal
Formality: DYP leaders reserves final say for Tuesday
to make a final try for a right-left government
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Defying warnings from the country's divided political
mainstream and risking a growing split in her own party, True
Path Party (DYP) leader Tansu Ciller on Friday moved closer to
a government partnership with the country's ascendant Islamists,
but postponed the deal to Tuesday.
After two-hours of talks with pro-Iislamic Welfare Party (RP)
leader Necmettin Erbakan, Ciller said she would make a final offer
to Democratic Left Party (DSP) chief Bulent Ecevit for an alternative
coalition before nailing the deal with the Islamists.Ecevit indicated
earlier Monday that he was not warm to the proposal.
Ciller broke a center-right alliance with the Motherland Party
(ANAP) of outgoing prime minister Mesut Yilmaz last month over
his support to corruption probes against her.
Speaking after the DYP leader, Erbakan spoke confidently of a
"RP-led government with this party or the other," saying
it was inevitable after the mainstream rivals' inability to come
together. He said Ciller's delay in making up her mind on his
offer --made a week ago-- was normal. Erbakan also played down
a spate of defections from the DYP, saying the projected coalition
was assured of a confidence vote.
Although the leaders reserved the announcement of the accord to
next week, sources close to both said the sides had by and large
agreed on the terms of the partnership and had signed a 10-point
protocol after chief aides met late Thursday.
Under the deal, the RP reportedlygot 18 of the 32 cabinet slots,
including key interior, defense and justice portfolios as well
as nine state ministries. The DYP reportedly held on to the foreign
ministry although Emre Gonensay, currently holding the post, is
expected to be replaced since he publicly came against a partnership
with the RP on Thursday and said he would vote against it even
if it causes his expulsion.
The RP-DYP accord opened the door to power for the Islamists just
six months after Ciller and Yilmaz sheathed swords to form the
ill-starred coalition to block their path although they emerged
winners from the Dec. 24 elections, bagging 158 of the 550 Parliament
seats.
But despite Erbakan's later efforts to modify RP's radical economic
program and its anti-West stance in order to attract partners,
a political conservatism shaped by 72 years of secularism portends
trouble for the unconventional partnership.
The deal has already cost both leaders in terms of credibility.
Ciller's approach to Erbakan contradicts her earlier vows not
to do any business with the "fundamentalists" who, she
said was a threat for Turkey and the world.
Erbakan, meanwhile, went back on his word when he persuaded his
deputies to vote against a probe motion against Ciller over a
slush funds scandal despite the RP's much-advertized stance against
corruption.
Beside foreign minister Gonensay and diehard Ciller foes sworn
to oppose the deal, six DYP deputies have already resigned, five
of them defecting to ANAP. The exodus, which cut the DYP's Parliamentary
strength to 129, is predicted to continue in the coming days to
further sap the majority of the projected partnership although
a seven-strong Grand Unity Party is expected to back it.
The RP-DYP dialogue followed earlier proposals by Ciller for alternative
government formulas bringing together all or some of the center-right
and left parties making up the political mainstream.
But both the Democratic Left Party (DSP) led by Bulent Ecevit
--who backed the collapsed coalition-- and the rival leftist Republican
People's Party of Deniz Baykal, Ciller's former government partner,
have shunned the calls, saying DYP and ANAP had to credibly make
up first.
[02] Jordan speaks up for Turkey, undermines Syrian accusations
Damascus' attempts to activate Arab world against Turkey
appear set to flounder on rocks of Arab disunity as Amman voices
support for Ankara's accusations against Syria, and other Arab
capitals ponder disadvantages of alienating 'a larger, predominantly
Sunni' Muslim country to their north
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- The Arab summit to convene in Cairo today is turning
into a diplomatic battleground between Syria, a participant in
this gathering, and Turkey, which although not a participant will
be a subject of discussion because of Arab anger over a military
accord it signed with Israel.
But it appears that Syria may not have its way fully given that
Jordan, a key player in the Middle East, also has complaints against
Damascus which tally with Ankara's complaints.
There are also indications that other Arab countries are now pondering
the wisdom of alienating a predominantly Sunni Muslim country
like Turkey at a time of changing balances in the Middle East.
Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq al-Shara, speaking before today's
summit of the Arab League in Cairo, accused Turkey on Friday of
deliberately escalating the tension between the two countries.
Pointing out that while the situation in Israel after the election
of arch-conservative Benjamin Netanyahu would be the main topic
at the summit, al-Shara said "other issues would also be
on the agenda."
"In the forefront of these come the Turkish troop concentrations
on the Turkish border and the deliberate tension created by the
Turkish authorities in northern Syria," he said while addressing
reporters in Cairo.
Turkey has officially denied that there is such a troop buildup
on its border with Syria and officials in Ankara have said that
Damascus is the one that has been "deliberately" increasing
the tension over the past weeks.
Ankara accuses Syria of supporting the outlawed Kurdistan Workers'
Party (PKK), which is waging a separatist war in Turkey and whose
leader is known, despite Syrian denials, to live in Damascus.
"Syria wants the best possible relations with Turkey, it
doesn't want this tension and this escalation and we believe this
tension and escalation to be artificial," al-Shara said according
to Reuters.
"We are working so that Turkey appreciates that Syrian-Turkish
relations are important for all sides. Other agreements have been
made with a state which still occupies Arab land and I don't think
that is good for Arab-Turkish relations... It turns the area into
a focus of tension," al-Shara added.
Diplomats in Ankara are bracing themselves for the possibility
of a strong statement from today's Arab summit against Turkey
on its recently concluded military accord with Israel and on the
issue of the waters of the Euphrates.
Turkish Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay was reported earlier this
week as sending letters to the Arab League secretary general and
individual Arab countries, excepting Syria, asking them to refrain
from an anti-Turkish statement at their weekend summit.
He repeated on Thursday that Turkey had asked Arab countries not
to take Syria's side in its water dispute with Turkey.
"They (the Arab countries) are above all the ones who should
feel concerned if they publish a declaration against Turkey at
the summit," Gonensay told reporters after a ministry meeting.
A senior unnamed Jordanian official was quoted by the Anatolia
news agency, reporting on Friday from Cairo, as saying that Turkey
was justified in its complaint against Syria concerning the PKK.
Similar views were echoed by unnamed Jordanian officials quoted
by Reuters who said that instead of attacking the Israeli-Turkish
accord, Jordan wanted the summit's final statement to condemn
"terrorism" instead.
This was taken as a reference to charges by Amman that Syria has
helped saboteurs infiltrate Jordan.
"We have no problem with the (Turkish-Israeli) accord. It
is a Syrian issue which they have exaggerated," a Jordanian
official was quoted as saying in this context.
"Whatever we say and address to Turkey will be from a positive
standpoint," Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr Moussa was quoted
by Reuters as saying after the Arab League's ministerial meeting
on Friday.
"We are very concerned that our relations with Turkey should
not only be very good relations but strategic relations."
"Arab states have no interest in creating an atmosphere of
enmity with a large Sunni Muslim country on their borders,"
Reuters quoted another senior summit delegate as saying.
[03] Turkey's presence in Florence is considered 'forward step'
PM Yilmaz to travel to Italy today despite Greek efforts to
get EU's invitation to him withdrawn
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey's participation on the sidelines of the
European Union's Florence Summit today, despite a flurry of frantic
last minute diplomatic activity by Athens to block such an eventuality,
is being taken by Turkish officials as a 'forward step' in the
direction of Ankara's eventual full integration into Europe.
Responding to outgoing EU term president Italy's invitation, Prime
Minister Mesut Yilmaz will be flying to Florence today to attend
a working dinner to include the Union's Troika plus remaining
members.
The Troika includes the EU's former term president Spain, current
president Italy and next president Ireland.
Turkish Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay will be accompanying Prime
Minister Yilmaz in Florence.
Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis wrote a letter to term president
Italy earlier this week demanding that the invitation extended
to Turkey be withdrawn but failed to have this demand honored.
Diplomats expect a new bout of recrimination in Athens after the
Florence summit, as has been the case in the previous Madrid and
Cannes summits, over what is expected to be seen as "Greece
having been deserted by its partners once again over Turkey."
Athens has angered its EU allies over its determination to block
credits earmarked to Turkey within the context of the customs
union Ankara concluded with the Union.
This anger at Greece mounted when Athens decided to also block
aid to Mediterranean countries because this also included aid
to Turkey.
Diplomats say that despite official EU statements of support for
Greece as an EU member, these are merely "pro-forma"
and patience has in fact come close to drying up concerning the
negative stance Athens has taken, not just on Turkey, but on a
host of political issues of close concern to the EU.
In his talks with EU leaders today, expected to include French
President Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Yilmaz
is expected to push for the customs union accord Turkey signed
to be honored fully by the European side.
This will mean, in effect, that Ankara will be asking for means
to be found to overcome Greece's attempts at trying to block Turkey
in this respect at every stage.
It is significant in this respect that Turkish President Suleyman
Demirel had a phone conversation with President Chirac on Friday.
[04] OECD says Turkey needs strategy to avert instability
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkey will face the threat of economic instability
if it fails to develop a viable medium-term economic strategy,
the OECD said on Thursday.
"Failure to establish a credible medium-term economic strategy
and to restore fiscal stability could trigger a deterioration
in confidence and economic instability," the OECD said in
its latest economic outlook report.
Growth in Turkey's GDP is expected to slow in 1996 after a sharp
rebound last year, in response to an assumed tightening of macro-economic
policy, the report said.
It forecast GDP growth will ease to some 4.5 percent in 1996 from
7.3 percent a year earlier, based on an assumed restriction of
the PSBR to eight to nine percent of GDP this year.
Fiscal tightening will help rein in inflation to around 70 percent
in 1996 and 60 percent the following year compared with 81.6 percent
in 1995, the report said.
This scenario would be consistent with a modest pickup in growth
to around five percent growth in 1997 and a current account deficit
of around two to three percent of GDP, the OECD said.
But it said the risks and uncertainties surrounding these projections
are large. Political instability, heightened by the resignation
of Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz earlier this month, has hindered
economic reform, according to economists. "Some limited progress
has been made in restructuring large loss-making state economic
enterprises, and privatization, albeit making progress, has remained
plagued by delays," the OECD said.
Further, legislation to reform the tax and pension systems has
yet to be passed by parliament and tax revenue will be hit by
the abolition of the Mass Housing Fund and other levies previously
charged on imports, it said.
Further progress on fiscal consolidation and structural reform
requires a greater degree of social cohesion and political resolve,
the report said.
[05] Turkish submarines in Malaysian waters
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Defense Minister Oltan Sungurlu left Turkey on
Thursday to pay an official visit to Malaysia, the Anatolia news
agency reported.
Sungurlu informed the press at Esenboga Airport before leaving
Turkey that Malaysia was going to buy two made-in-Turkey submarines.
He pointed out that Turkey was one of the three countries which
sold arms to Malaysia. "Our aim is to improve the defense
cooperation between the two countries," he said, noting that
Turkish companies had investments in Malaysia and Indonesia.
"These two countries (Malaysia and Indonesia) are among those
countries which purchase the greatest amount of arms. Turkey wants
to increase its share in this market," he said, pointing
out that the defense industry had improved greatly in these two
countries in recent years and that they had become a major arms
market.
Sungurlu will be staying in Malaysia for three days.
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