Financial Times FT.com

An existential struggle that can have no winners

By Soli Ozel

Published: June 10 2008 03:30 | Last updated: June 10 2008 03:30

Turkey’s constitutional court is considering a case to close the ruling Justice and Development party (AKP) and ban 71 of its politicians from politics.

The charge is that they are trying to impose sharia law on the country. Those facing a ban include the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a one-time Islamist firebrand, whose expulsion from politics is probably the most ardently desired goal of those behind the move. The court is expected to rule by November.

You have viewed your allowance of free articles. If you wish to view more, click the button below.

Read this

"Front page" sub navigation

"World" sub navigation

"Asia-Pacific" sub navigation

"Europe" sub navigation

"Latin America & Caribbean" sub navigation

"Middle East & North Africa" sub navigation

"UK" sub navigation

"US & Canada" sub navigation

"Companies" sub navigation

"Energy" sub navigation

"Financials" sub navigation

"Health" sub navigation

"Industrials" sub navigation

"Retail & Consumer" sub navigation

"Technology" sub navigation

"Transport" sub navigation

"By region" sub navigation

"Columnists" sub navigation

"Markets" sub navigation

"FTfm" sub navigation

"Markets Data" sub navigation

"FT Trading Room" sub navigation

"Equities" sub navigation

"Lex" sub navigation

"Comment" sub navigation

"Management" sub navigation

"Columnists" sub navigation

"Personal Finance" sub navigation

"Investments" sub navigation

"Tools & Calculators" sub navigation

"Compare & Apply" sub navigation

"Life & Arts" sub navigation

"Arts" sub navigation

"Pursuits" sub navigation

"Travel" sub navigation

"Interactive" sub navigation

"In depth" sub navigation

"Jobs & classified" sub navigation

"Jobs" sub navigation

"Services & tools" sub navigation

"News by email" sub navigation

FT Alphaville

Mergermarket

Debtwire

Market-moving economics

FT.com RSS Feeds

FT Lexicon