Latest update : 2016-04-27
Turkey’s new constitution will retain secularism as a principle, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Wednesday, playing down comments from the parliamentary speaker who triggered a public uproar by calling for a religious national charter.
Speaker Ismail Kahraman said this week that overwhelmingly Muslim Turkey needed a religious constitution, a proposal at odds
with the modern republic’s founding principles. He later said his
comments were “personal views” and that the new constitution should
guarantee religious freedoms.
“In the new constitution which we are preparing, the principle of secularism will
be included as one guaranteeing individuals’ freedom of religion and
faith, and the state’s equal distance to all faith groups,” Davutoglu
said in a speech to members of his ruling AK Party.
Kahraman’s comments provoked opposition condemnation and a brief
street protest, highlighting the schism in Turkish society reaching back
to the 1920s when Mustafa Kemal Ataturk forged a secular republic and
banished Islam from public life.
Davutoglu also said the government would seek a “liberal interpretation” of secularism, as opposed to an “authoritarian” one.
President Tayyip Erdogan
and the ruling AK Party he founded, their roots in political Islam,
have tried to restore the role of religion in public life. They have
expanded religious education and allowed the head scarf, once banned
from state offices, to be worn in colleges and parliament.
The headscarf ban, widely seen by the millions of pious Turks who
back the AKP as an authoritarian stricture, was overturned by the ruling
party in 2013.
The AKP is pushing to replace the existing constitution, which dates
back to the period after a 1980 military coup. As speaker, Kahraman is
overseeing efforts to draft a new text.
(REUTERS)
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