Islamofascist Gül becomes Turkish President
AKP Watch August 28th, 2007
A devout Muslim with a background in political Islam won the Turkish presidency on Tuesday, in a major triumph for the Islamic-rooted government after months of confrontation with the secular establishment.
Turkey: Back to the Past
“A person who has defied the (secular) republic, who has said he finds it to be wrong, is about to move to the top of the state. This is a contradiction,” said Deniz Baykal, leader of the secular opposition. His party boycotted the vote on Tuesday and has said it would not take part in some state occasions, including presidential ceremonies.
Islamist Takeover Completed
Now Islamofascist AK Party (aka AKP) has completed the takeover of Turkey’s top posts, allowing it to move ahead with an Islamisation programme. AK Party already working on a more islamic constitution proposal which removes all references to founding principles of Turkish Republic set by Atatürk. On the hand, a new draft of education reform appeared in newspapers which removes headscarfe ban and Islamise curriculum in the schools.
Secular Turkey is under thread
Meanwhile Army forces issued a warning in eve of Gül’s presidency: “Our nation has been watching the behavior of those separatists who can’t embrace Turkey’s unitary nature, and centers of evil that systematically try to corrode the secular nature of the Turkish republic,” General Yasar Buyukanit, chief of the military, said in a statement posted to the military’s Web site Monday.
Turkey’s First Islamofascist Führer
Recently, Bekir Coskun, a prominent secular-minded columnist, wrote that he would not feel comfortable calling Mr. Gul “my president.” Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan would not tolerate such criticism. “Some say that [Mr. Gul] cannot be their president,” he said. “If they can say such things, first, they need to have their Turkish citizenship revoked. They can go wherever they want, and elect whomever they want.” Soon, Mr. Coskun received death threats.
- AK Party , AKP , Erdogan , Gül , Islamofascism , Secularism , Turkey
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