By Tulay Karadeniz
Source: Yahoo News
ANKARA (Reuters) - Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan ordered his ambassadors on Wednesday to confront
allies with the "truth" that a graft investigation shaking Ankara was
the result of a foreign-backed plot to sabotage Turkey's international
standing.
Erdogan, visiting
Brussels next week, also mockingly rejected European Union expressions
of concern about his moves to tighten control over a judiciary he sees
as central to the conspiracy. His finance minister said political
turbulence may hinder Turkey in reaching a 4 percent growth target this
year.
What erupted a month
ago as a corruption inquiry involving the sons of three ministers and
businessmen close to the government has grown into one of the biggest
challenges of Erdogan's 11-year rule and damaged Turkey's image abroad.
Erdogan said politicians, domestic and foreign media and financiers were conspiring against Turkish interests.
"We expect you to exert more effort to defeat this treacherous
operation targeting Turkey by telling our partners the truth," Erdogan
told the conference of Turkish ambassadors in the capital Ankara.
Details of the corruption allegations have not been made public, but
are thought to relate to construction and real estate projects and
Turkey's gold trade with Iran.
Erdogan's supporters see U.S.-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen - a
former ally whose network of followers is influential in the police and
judiciary - as a prime mover in a plot backed by foreign collaborators.
"They are trying to deal a heavy blow to Turkey's economy. They are
making efforts to push interest rates higher. In order to make
international investors uneasy they use every means.
"Most importantly they are working hard to harm Turkey's image in the world," Erdogan said.
He has responded by purging the police of hundreds of officers and
seeking tighter control over the appointment of judges and prosecutors,
raising alarm in Brussels in particular, which has been engaged in years
of protracted EU membership negotiations with Ankara.
EU enlargement commissioner Stefan Fule told Turkey's new EU minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu in their first meeting this week that any changes to
the judiciary must not call into question Turkey's commitment to meeting
EU membership criteria.
Erdogan rejected such concerns.
"I'm sorry but we won't be taken in by evaluation like 'this is
contrary to the European Union acquis'. We know how to read and write.
We can see what is going on," he said.
ECONOMIC FALLOUT
Erdogan's AK Party has proposed a draft bill giving government more say
over the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK), which makes top
judicial appointments, a move the opposition says would violate the
constitution and sees as an attempt to stifle the corruption
investigation.
President
Abdullah Gul, who would have to ratify the bill, called for compromise
on Wednesday, saying Turkey's rival political parties should instead
agree on changes to articles in the constitution governing the
judiciary.
"There is
agreement among the parties that there should be an HSYK which is
independent and impartial and within the framework of EU principles,"
Gul said, adding prospects for a deal should become clear within a
couple of days.
But the main
opposition CHP said it would only negotiate if Erdogan withdrew the
draft bill first, while a senior AK Party official said he was not
optimistic of reaching a compromise.
The feud has shaken investor confidence and raised questions about the
credibility of Turkey's institutions, helping drive the lira - already
battered by waning investor appetite for emerging markets - to historic
lows.
Finance Minister Mehmet
Simsek said the political turbulence was among factors which could
prevent Turkey reaching its target of four percent economic growth this
year.
"It makes investors
tense both domestically and abroad. This tension will be reflected in
consumption and investment decisions and hence in growth," he told a
news conference.
The AK Party's reputation for economic management has been one of the cornerstones of its three successive election wins over the past decade, a record Erdogan wants to maintain in the run up to local elections in March and a presidential race which he is expected to contest in August.
(Additional reporting by Adrian Croft in Brussels; Writing by Daren Butler and Nick Tattersall; Editing by Ralph Boulton)
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