Dissidents in Turkey's nationalist
opposition blame AKP for legal limbo
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[May 14, 2016]
ANKARA (Reuters) - Dissidents in
Turkey's nationalist opposition accused the government on Saturday of
interfering in an internal party dispute that could end up jeopardizing
President Tayyip Erdogan's plans for more power.
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Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli addresses his
party's lawmakers during a meeting at the Turkish parliament in Ankara,
Turkey May 10, 2016. REUTERS/Stringer |
Several hundred members of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP)
have launched a bid to oust Devlet Bahceli, leader for much of the
last two decades, and to do so they need to change party rules at a
special congress they want to hold on Sunday.
Four leaders of the revolt, including former interior minister Meral
Aksener, issued a statement accusing Erdogan's AK Party of
intervening to try to block the special congress.
Bahceli's faction sought an injunction to block the meeting but an
Ankara court upheld the dissidents' countersuit. Only minutes later,
state-broadcaster TRT reported verdicts from two other local courts
that would halt the congress.
The MHP's dispute could be crucial for Erdogan because he needs its
help to amend the constitution and give him more power. Dissident
leader Aksener opposes that and polls say she could double support
for MHP if she ousts Bahceli.
The AKP has increased its influence over the courts in recent years
and its opponents say the legal chaos surrounding the congress
results from its efforts to keep Bahceli in power.
"This is a direct intervention from the AK Party and government to
the MHP congress and it is unacceptable," the dissidents said in a
statement. They added that they would turn up at the hotel where
the congress was scheduled to take place on Sunday.
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Bahceli has led the MHP for much of the last two decades. His party
won about 12 percent of the general election last November, getting
40 seats in parliament whose votes the AKP needs to call a
referendum to amend the constitution.
Bahceli loyalists seem willing to do this, but Aksener, a former
interior minister, has vowed she would defend Turkey's current
parliamentary system and oppose Erdogan's plan.
AKP officials reject any suggestions that the government or ruling
party is influencing the courts, or that the MHP's leadership battle
and AKP efforts to win its support on constitutional change are in
any way linked.
(Reporting by Ercan Gurses in Ankara; Writing by Seda Sezer; Editing
by Tom Heneghan)
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