Turkish Daily News, 96-06-28
From: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs <http://www.mfa.gov.tr>
TURKISH DAILY NEWS 28 June 1996
CONTENTS
[01] Ciller firm on pact with RP as Yilmaz offers union
[02] Political turmoil has been good for Turkish stocks
[03] Ankara says Boutros-Ghali report on Cyprus tries to be impartialbut has serious shortcomings
[04] Turkey-Jordan ties improves
[05] Culture Minister kicks off Mostar campaign
[01] Ciller firm on pact with RP as Yilmaz offers union
Snub: ANAP leader says the two party's candidates should compete for the
leadership of merger after summer; unresponsive Ciller tries to win
converts for the coalition with Islamists
TDN Parliament Bureau
ANKARA- True Path Party (DYP) leader Tansu Ciller on Thursday drew nearer
to finalizing a coalition with Islamists despite a last-minute call from
Mesut Yilmaz, the Motherland Party (ANAP) leader and her former government
partner, for a merger between the two center-right parties. The pro-Islamic
Welfare Party (RP), seeking a firm reply from Ciller for weeks, indicated,
meanwhile, that it would not wait much longer.
Yilmaz, who still heads the defunct partnership between ANAP and DYP, said
he was making the offer now "before Ciller makes a historic mistake that
she would very much regret later."
The DYP leader has been negotiating with RP leader Necmettin Erbakan who
has offered a coalition that will replace the partnership Ciller ended last
month when Yilmaz backed corruption probes against her. She has been
delaying her ascent to the start of the coalition talks to break the strong
opposition within her center-right party to sharing power with the
Islamists.
Addressing himself to Ciller while speaking to ANAP deputies, Yilmaz
proposed a unification congress that would unite the center-right after the
two parties separately hold their congresses by the end of summer to elect
their respective candidates to lead the merger, and then hold a unification
congress in which equal numbers of delegates will choose the leader.
Yilmaz saw no other government model as feasible under the present
conditions of the country "at a time when the people had began wondering
where the country was being dragged and rumors were circulating about a
military coup."
But the call received an icy response from DYP officials as Ciller strove
to sell the deal with the Islamist RP to her party's deputies.
While Ismet Sezgin, a mainstream DYP politician opposed to the coalition
with the RP, hailed Yilmaz's proposal, many other DYP big guns, including
Ciller opponents, brushed aside the offer as either too late or as an
opportunistic move designed to scuttle the deal with the Islamists.
Although her arch-rival's call had reportedly been extended her through
Necmettin Cevheri, her top aide, Ciller avoided any comment on the offer
while addressing the DYP deputies. The snub was taken as an indirect
rejection.
In the closed meeting, Ciller for the first time defended the proposed
partnership with the RP openly to the DYP deputies, trying to comfort fears
of the opponents, party sources told the TDN.
"If we do not set up a coalition with the RP, ANAP will," Ciller reportedly
said to win the critics over to the deal, assuring them that DYP would
never compromise from its principles.
"We are entering this partnership because we are forced to," Ciller said,
arguing that all the other formulas she had offered had been rejected by
other parties. "Why do we enter this coalition? It is not possible for us
to come to terms with the RP's (Islamist) identity. Then are we entering
the partnership to start fighting? No; we are entering to imprint it with
our own identity," Ciller reportedly told the DYP deputies.
Having agreed to Erbakan's taking first turn at the head of the partnership,
Ciller played down her subordination to the Islamist leader, sources said,
adding that only Sezgin spoke against the deal, while other leading DYP
politicians avoided adverse comments "not to compromise their chances of
bagging Cabinet seats."
About 60 deputies attended the meeting out of DYP's present strength of
129. Six deputies have already left the party, most defecting to rival ANAP
after Ciller started the bargain with Erbakan asked by President Demirel to
form the government three weeks ago. Several other deputies, including
Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay, have vowed to cast no-confidence votes
against the partnership.
RP is about to run out of patience
The pro-Islamic RP, still awaiting a final response from Ciller on a
coalition government, is about to run out of patience. RP Deputy Chairman
Ahmet Tekdal urged Ciller to say "either yes or no."
Speaking at a press conference in Parliament, Tekdal said both the DYP and
the RP had reached an agreement in principle on the formation of a
coalition. He said consensus had been reached on the DYP's offer on
rotational premiership model with RP leader Erbakan taking the first turn.
He implied that the DYP was stepping back from areas where the two parties
had earlier reached an agreement. He recommended that "Byzantine intrigues"
should be avoided and that they should act like statesmen. He urged
Ciller not to make the issues on which consensus had been reached
become subjects of negotiation again.
"This issue should not be allowed to turn into a tale without an end. If it
is to be accepted, one should act with determination. If it is to be
refused, this should be stated explicitly. There is no need to prolong the
issue," Kazan said.
Stressing that the formation of the government should not be delayed,
Tekdal said that the Cabinet list should be presented to President Demirel
on today at the latest.
Without naming either Yilmaz or Alparslan Turkes of the Nationalist
Movement Party (MHP), Tekdal accused both leaders of preventing the
formation of the RP-DYP coalition.
Tekdal said that efforts to form an RP-free government under the premiership
of a third person and the deputy transfers (from the DYP to ANAP) were both
aimed at obstructing the DYP-RP government. He said such tricks had been
tried before and had resulted in failure. He said an election was the only
alternative to an RP-free government.
Tekdal said that coalition talks were still in progress and dealing with
the distribution of ministerial seats and the shape of the coalition
protocol. He said he did not think any problem would arise on those issues.
"Such issues can only be used as an excuse for not forming the coalition,"
he said.
[02] Political turmoil has been good for Turkish stocks
'Investors think political shakeup can clear the air' 'Army signals it can
live with RP coalition'
Turkish Daily News
WASHINGTON- The conservative mass-circulation daily Wall Street Journal
ran an analysis filed by Kyle Pope from Istanbul which studied the strange
rise in the Istanbul stock market as a result of the collapse of the ANAP-
DYP coalition government. The fact that the pro-Islamic Welfare Party (RP)
is now closer than ever to sharing power does not necessarily scare the
West or the investors, the newspaper says. "The chaos in Turkish
politics may signal a kind of progress," Pope prophetically projects.
Why? Because at least now everyone knows that a coalition government that
does not include the RP will not be stable, the newspaper explains. Even
the Turkish Army seems to have reached the same conclusion although "any
aggressive move to turn back the clock on Turkey's secular reforms could be
met with force."
Such U.S. companies as T.G.I. Friday, Citicorp, and Bridgestone are said to
be expanding their businesses in Turkey regardless of the political turmoil,
and stocks have risen, making it "among the five busiest trading floors in
the world, by volume."
"Analysts say the Army brass have become convinced that a coalition that
excludes Welfare would be too shaky to stay in power and that the turmoil
caused by the repeated collapse of a secular regime is more harmful than
including the Islamists in power," the Wall Street Journal said.
Ciller's the big loser
Ciller is seen as the big loser of the "new political order in Turkey. "The
business community blames her zeal for power for keeping Turkish politics
in limbo, and outsiders predict that corruption allegations leveled against
her are likely to stick," the newspaper said.
Clouds gathering
Yet, despite the fact that the Turkish economy has grown by 7 percent last
year, and is expected to expand by another 3 percent this year, not
everybody benefited from such growth at the same extent. In fact, "for most
people, life is actually getting worse," the Wall Street Journal noted.
The government finances are "a mess," the analysis pointed out. "Inflation
is running at 82 percent a year, and the Treasury's debt rose nearly 25
percent during the first four months of this year, to $30 billion. Worse,
the political turmoil is imperiling a new International Monetary Fund aid
package for Turkey and has prompted Standard & Poor's Rating Group to
rank Turkey's long-term debt as the worst of any country it covers, except
Venezuela," the newspaper said.
After noting that a strong government is needed to implement strong
structural reforms such as tax and social-security reforms to get Turkey
out the tight corner it is in, the Wall Street Journal quoted "optimists"
offering an interesting "solution" to Turkey's political stalemate: "Much
of Turkey's leadership, including President Suleyman Demirel and the
leaders of three of the top four parties, are near retirement age."
[03] Ankara says Boutros-Ghali report on Cyprus tries to be impartialbut has serious shortcomings
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Ankara on Thursday characterized U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali's report on Cyprus, issued earlier this week, as an attempt
at being "impartial" although "insufficient."
Responding to a statement about the report issued on Tuesday, Foreign
Ministry spokesman Omer Akbel said a study of the report indicated that the
secretary-general had tried to approach the subject from an impartial
perspective.
But he said that the absence of the full facts in the report indicated that
there was the possibility that those who were not aware of the intricacies
of this problem may be misled.
"For example it is a big oversight that it should not be mentioned in the
report that the Greek Cypriot side that has refused to come to the
negotiation table for a year-and-a-half, that it was the side that refused
even to acknowledge the (U.N. secretary-general's) 'set of ideas' for a
settlement to the Cyprus problem, and that it is the side that considers
the (secretary-general's) proposed confidence-building measure as
nonexistent," Akbel said.
Akbel said another point that attracted attention in Ghali's report was
that he underlined the decision by the European Union to begin talks in
1997 or 1998 on Cyprus' accession to the group as "an important new
development which should facilitate an overall settlement" to the Cyprus
problem.
Akbel recalled that the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus considered the
Greek Cypriot application to the EU on behalf of the whole Island as null
and void.
Akbel also pointed to the fact that the secretary-general had not given any
space to Turkish Cypriot President Rauf Denktas's views on the Greek
Cypriot application to the EU.
The secretary-general in his report appealed to the leaders of the Turkish
Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communities to break a longstanding deadlock over
the division of their island and work toward the resumption of talks,
Reuters reported from New York.
"A lasting settlement will not be achieved unless the two leaders can
persuade their communities that their interests will be better served by
flexibility and compromise than by continuing confrontation," Boutros-Ghali
wrote in a report.
He had called on Greek Cypriot President Glafkos Clerides and Turkish
Cypriot President Rauf Denktas, whom he met separately this month, to
"break the present impasse and establish common ground on which direct
negotiations can be resumed."
Alluding to the Turkish Cypriots' opposition to EU membership for Cyprus
before the division of the island had been resolved, he said: "The European
Commission's efforts to explain to the Turkish Cypriot community the
benefits of EU membership and to allay its concerns are important in this
regard. The imminence of the accession negotiations should also instil a
new sense of urgency to the search for an overall agreement."
[04] Turkey-Jordan ties improves
Closer: After Arab-summit meeting at which Jordan opposed any decision
against Turkey, Turkish Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay will go Amman for a
one-day working visit
Turkish Daily News
ANKARA- Turkish Foreign Minister Emre Gonensay will go to Amman today for
a one-day working visit, in the wake of the Arab summit meeting in Cairo
last week at which Jordan supported Turkey.
The Middle East peace process and the struggle against terrorism are
expected to be the main subjects of the talks.
The Jordanian Air Forces commander, in a statement three days ago, said
that they wanted hold join military exercises with Turkey and also with
Israel.
Diplomatic sources said that the attempt to improve relations with Jordan,
seen together with the closening of ties with Israel, did not amount to a
new grouping in the Middle East.
According to a written statement from the Turkish Foreign Ministry
Gonensay's visit was planned during the visit of King Hussein bin Tallal to
Ankara on May 16.
The statement also pointed out that Turkey considers Jordan to be a partner
in cooperation and said that the friendship between the two countries would
be beneficial for the much-needed peace in the region.
[05] Culture Minister kicks off Mostar campaign
Turkish Daily News
ISTANBUL- Culture Minister Agah Oktay Guner opened the campaign "A stone
from me too for Mostar" yesterday. The Mostar Bridge was destroyed during
the war in Bosnia. Guner pointed out that the bridge was the place where
East and West and Islamic Turkish and European civilizations met.
It is estimated that it will take between $7.5 and $10 million to restore
the bridge to the condition it was in before the war broke out. The bridge
should be fully restored by the year 2004 and several projects have already
been prepared. Businessmen such as Feyyaz Berker, Ayhan Sahenk, Inan Kirac
and Aydin Bolak have pledged their assistance while Hurriyet newspaper is
supporting the new campaign.
The bridge was built in the 16th century by the famous architect Mimar
Sinan.
Characterizing Anatolia as an open air museum, Guner stressed that a draft
law had been submitted to Parliament through which the Cultural Ministry
would add 1,750 new staff members. Their job would be to protect the
historical heritage, excavation sites and museums.
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