AFP/Reuters/Ankara

Turkey’s outgoing premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan was sworn in yesterday as president to extend his decade-long rule, as opponents who accuse him of authoritarianism walked out of the ceremony.
Erdogan, 60, took the oath in Ankara to begin a five-year mandate in which he has vowed to build a “new Turkey” by pushing through a new constitution and driving on with an ambitious development programme.
Deputies of the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) – who accuse Erdogan of violating the constitution – angrily walked out of parliament just before he was sworn in.
CHP deputy head Engin Altay hurled the rule book containing parliament’s procedures across the chamber as his MPs marched out before Erdogan was sworn in to thunderous applause from supporters.
Erdogan has made clear he wants to wield genuine executive power as president after becoming the first directly elected head of state, taking 52% of the vote in the August 10 poll.
His recent predecessors in the Cankaya presidential palace performed a largely ceremonial role.
The election was a triumph for Erdogan – who first become premier in 2003 – after surviving a tumultuous 2013 that saw mass anti-government protests and corruption allegations against his inner circle.
He takes over as president from Abdullah Gul, a former close comrade and co-founder of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), who appears now to have fallen out with the feisty Erdogan and is expected to play no role in the next government.
Erdogan’s five-year presidential term means he will have ruled Turkey longer than its modern founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who established the republic out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.
He can serve two mandates and so could theoretically stay in power until 2024, which would allow him to see in the 100th anniversary of modern Turkey in 2023, and portray himself as a historic figure to rival Ataturk.
Erdogan has made clear he wants to press on with a programme of infrastructure projects including a mammoth new airport in Istanbul, a new canal to divert shipping from the Bosphorus and a high-speed rail network for the whole country.
Taking his oath of office, Erdogan swore to “abide by the constitution, the rule of law, democracy, the principles and reforms of Ataturk, the principles of the secular Republic”.
“In my capacity as President of the Republic, I swear upon my honour and repute before the great Turkish nation and before history to safeguard the existence and independence of the state,” he said at the brief ceremony.
In line with tradition, he laid a wreath at Ataturk’s vast Anitkabir mausoleum in Ankara, saying that the “bond between president and people” had weakened since Ataturk’s death in 1938.
“I believe that my tenure is an opportunity for the people and the state to embrace each other,” Erdogan said.
Moments after being sworn in, Erdogan appointed outgoing foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu as acting prime minister, according to an announcement in the official gazette.
But opponents have accused Erdogan of seeking to undermine Ataturk’s legacy by imposing a creeping Islamisation of society.
Controversially, he wants parliament to change the constitution after the 2015 legislative election to invest the presidency with more powers.
“We are faced with a man who places himself above the law and does not abide by any rule. This kind of mentality is unacceptable,” said CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
Altay explained his book-throwing antics, saying: “It was a democratic reaction. I would do it again.”
Heads of state from a dozen nations in Eastern Europe, Africa, Central Asia and the Middle East attended the ceremony, the Anatolia news agency reported.
But leaders of top Western states were conspicuous by their absence in a possible sign of suspicion towards Erdogan’s strongman tendencies.
The United States only sent its charge d’affaires in Ankara, in what some commentators have seen as a clear snub.
Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko had to cancel his trip due to the advance of pro-Russian forces in the east of his country.
Davutoglu, 55, is a long standing ally who as prime minister is expected to do little to challenge the Turkish number one.
He was confirmed as party leader on Wednesday at a vast AKP congress at which both men vowed there would be no change in policy, despite the changeover.
Davutoglu will form a new cabinet by today, with intense speculation over who will hold the top jobs, with the head of Turkey’s intelligence service Hakan Fidan a possible new foreign minister.
Davutoglu, who became foreign minister in 2009, is a controversial figure blamed by some for pursuing an over-ambitious foreign policy that led to the rise of Islamic militants in Syria.
In a final speech as AK Party leader on Wednesday, Erdogan spoke of his move to the presidential palace as the birth of a new Turkey. But he vowed that the AK’s mission to elevate the country as a major regional power would go on unchanged after he left party politics. He must cut party ties as head of state.
Erdogan’s rhetoric has long played on the divisions between his supporters among Turkey’s pious conservatives and a Western-facing, largely secular class suspicious of his Islamic ideals.
In his farewell party address, he tried to strike a more conciliatory note.
“Whether they love us or not, I reach out my hand from here to every one of the 77mn people,” he said. “We understand your lifestyles, your values ... we want you to understand the bans, restrictions and threats we overcame to get here today.”
His combative nature was still in evidence, however, as he vowed to fight on against the “treachery” of his ally-turned-foe US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen.
Erdogan accuses Gulen of orchestrating a corruption scandal targeting the government through a network of followers in the police and judiciary.





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