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Turkish Constitutional Court says PM involved in anti-secularism
Turkey's Constitutional Court on Friday said that key members of the ruling AK Party, including Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and Education Minister Huseyin Celik, had been involved in anti-secular activities.
Ankara: Turkey's Constitutional Court said on Friday that Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and key members of his ruling AK Party had been involved in anti-secular activities, a move likely to renew political tensions in the EU candidate country.
The Constitutional Court, Turkey's highest judicial body, was setting out the reasons for a July ruling in which it decided not to close the AK Party for Islamist activities but instead fined it for undermining Turkey's secular principles.
"It needs to be accepted that the party became a focus of anti-secular activities due to its move to change some articles of the Turkish constitution," the court said referring to an AK Party-driven attempt to lift a ban on the wearing of Muslim headscarves at universities.
In a setback to the Islamist-rooted AK Party, the constitutional court in June overturned an amendment to lift the restriction, saying it violated Turkey's secular constitution.
The court's unexpectedly harsh criticism against Erdogan, who remains Turkey's most popular politician according to recent opinion polls, is likely to renew tensions in Turkey at a time when it is fighting to limit the impact of a global financial crisis.
The AK Party, which won a sweeping re-election last year, denies it has any Islamist agenda.
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