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Abdullah Gul

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  • From a standing start, Recep Tayyip Erdogan's AKP won an absolute majority on 3 November 2002, taking 363 out of 550 seats. The AKP has won all parliamentary elections in Turkey ever since.
    Turkey

    20 years of Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the AKP

    On 3 November 2002, Erdogan's newly founded AKP, Justice and Development Party, came to power in Turkey. It has ruled the country ever since, becoming more authoritarian with each victory. By Elmas Topcu

  • Few political symbols are more divisive in Turkey than the headscarf. For decades, the Turkish raison d'etat regarded the headscarf as a threat to modern, secular Turkey. For the country's founder Ataturk, the headscarf was the epitome of Islam at its most reactionary.
    Turkey's headscarf debate

    The politics of hijab

    In Turkey, the secular opposition is seeking to enshrine the right of women to wear a headscarf in law – scoring an own goal that plays straight into President Erdogan’s hands. Yet again, men are arguing about women's clothing. By Burak Unveren

  • Support for Turkey's AKP dwindles

    Erdogan’s homegrown rivals

    Erdogan has ruled Turkey firmly for the last 18 years, but his party now faces a huge challenge: former party heavyweights who have jumped ship to establish their own new parties. By Ayse Karabat

  • Turkey's general election

    Abdullah Gul′s choice

    With Turkey facing its second general election this year on 1 November, is Abdullah Gul, the country′s former president, going to provide Turkish politics with the counterweight to Recep Tayyip Erdogan it so urgently needs? A commentary by Nina L. Khruscheva

  • Turkey's secret service

    Erdogan paves way for Turkish surveillance state

    Turkey's government has submitted a bill to parliament in a bid to strengthen the position of the country's intelligence service and make it more independent of the judiciary. Critics say this will turn Turkey into a surveillance state. By Senada Sokollu

  • Local elections in Turkey

    An erosion of Erdogan's legitimacy

    Turkey is holding nationwide local elections on 30 March. The prime minister, mired in growing corruption allegations, has turned the polls into a referendum on his rule. With such high stakes, the vote is widely seen as one of the most important in the country's history. Dorian Jones has more from Istanbul

  • Corruption scandal in Turkey

    "The evaporation of the Turkish state as we know it"

    A series of alleged telephone recordings between the Turkish prime minister and members of his family has escalated an ongoing political crisis to unprecedented levels, with many now fearing for the state of the country's democracy. By Dorian Jones in Istanbul

  • Turkey's prime minister Erdogan at a rally of his ruling conservative AK party in Ankara (photo: Reuters)
    Interview with Cengiz Aktar

    ''Turkey's Problem is Erdogan, Not the AKP''

    According to Cengiz Aktar, Turkey's long-time Prime Minister Erdogan has become an autocrat. "Changing his mind would, in his opinion, be a sign of weakness", Aktar says in this interview with Ada Pagliarulo. He will therefore find it hard to manage the country's crisis, the political scientist predicts

  • Young Turks and Germans in Berlin protesting against the violent crackdown on demonstrations in Istanbul (photo: Ole Spata/dpa)
    Germany's Turkish Community and the Istanbul Protests

    Divided Community

    Germany's Turkish community is keeping a close eye on events in Istanbul. Many hope the young people in Taksim Square will prevail. Others are saying nothing. By Naomi Conrad

  • Supporters of Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan watch a rally organised by the ruling Justice and Development Party in Ankara, 15 June 2013 (Photo: Reuters)
    Protests in Turkey

    Civil Society Versus Father State

    For the first time in the history of Turkey, an increasingly confident civil society is peacefully calling for more freedom and, so far, the military has not got involved. This is a completely new experience for Turkey, writes Cemal Karakas

  • People run away from tear gas near Taksim square in Istanbul, 16 June 2013 (photo: BULENT KILIC/AFP/Getty Images)
    Gezi Protests in Turkey

    A Libertarian and Unifying Movement

    Parallels have been drawn between the Gezi movement, the Arab Spring and some Occupy movements in Europe. Nilüfer Göle looks at the causes of the Gezi protests and some of the protester's demands

  • Protests against Prime Minister Erdogan in Taksim Square in Istanbul (photo: Reuters)
    Protests in Turkey

    Erdogan Braces Himself for a ''Civilian Coup''

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan refuses to be cowed by recent demonstrations. He is planning huge rallies in Istanbul and Ankara this weekend as a show of strength and determination. He has also warned that his patience has run out. By Ayhan Simsek

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