UPDATED ON:
Sunday, May 06, 2007
07:10 Mecca time, 04:10 GMT
 
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Turks rally to support secularism

Crowds in the Turkish town of Manisa shouted "Turkey is secular and will remain secular"


Thousands of Turks have gathered in two western cities in the third anti-government protest in a month amid a conflict over the role of religion in the country's politics.
 
Saturday's protests in Canakkale and Manisa, near the Aegean coast, follow huge pro-secular rallies in Ankara and Istanbul attended by more than a million people.
Marchers called for Abdullah Gul, the presidential candidate of the ruling AK party, whose roots are in political Islam, to withdraw from the election.
 
Many demonstrators carried Turkish flags and posters of Kemal Ataturk, Turkey's founder who insisted on a separation of religion and state.
In Manisa, crowds shouted: "Turkey is secular and will remain secular. Count how many of us there are, Tayyip [Turkey's prime minister]."
 
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Political tension is running high after a warning from the pro-secular army against Gul and a court decision to annul the first round of parliamentary voting for head of state.
 
Recep Tayyip Erdogan has come under heavy pressure in the run-up to presidential elections, with secularists fearing that he would expand his party's control by appointing Gul, the country's foreign minister

The pressure led Erdogan to call for early parliamentary elections, which are scheduled for July 22.

A measure is also being debated in parliament to allow the president to be elected directly by the people, rather than by parliament, which is dominated by members of Erdogan's party.

'Shadow'

Gul said in an interview with The Financial Times that he would secure a  majority if a popular vote was held to decide who should be the  country's president.

Speaking to the newspaper on Saturday, he was critical of the court that decided on Tuesday to annul the first-round parliamentary vote on the presidency.

Gul said: "As the foreign minister, I respect and observe the court's decision, but that doesn't mean I am happy with it."

He referred to the crisis over the presidency, which prompted the military to threaten to intervene and protect the country's secular order, as a "shadow".

Gul said: "Our responsibility is to remove this shadow and to put everything on the right path."

Meanwhile, two Turkish parties merged on Saturday, which could strengthen the opposition against the ruling AK party in July's general election.

The ANAP and True Path parties, which have 20 and four seats respectively in the 550-seat parliament, announced the merger at a joint news conference and said their new name would be the Democrat party.

 Source: Agencies
 
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