PM Davutoglu said parliament will begin debate on revoking the parliamentary immunity for lawmakers from the opposition Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) after budget talks conclude on Wednesday.
Istanbul:
There will be no bargaining over a new constitution for Turkey which could enhance the powers of the president and the government will seek to put the matter to a referendum, the prime minister said on Sunday.
The ruling AKP party will have the support of all its 317 deputies for a new charter and will look for an additional 13 votes from the opposition that are needed to take the draft to a referendum, Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview with broadcaster A Haber.
A cross-party commission charged with drafting a new constitution collapsed last month after the main opposition pulled out over attempts by the AKP to change Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential system.
"All 317 AK Party lawmakers will do what's necessary. The constitution is not up for bargaining, it's a matter of principles," Davutoglu said. "We will find the 330 (votes) and take it to a referendum. Our people will have a constitution embraced by all, and the (current) charter will be consigned."
Senior AKP officials told Reuters last week that the party was working on its own proposals despite the opposition's resistance, plans which could hand President Tayyip Erdogan powers to draft legislation directly and pick ministers.
The AKP has broad support for overhauling the constitution, which dates back to the period after the 1980 military coup and has been repeatedly amended. But there are wide divergences over what a new charter should look like.
Erdogan wants the charter to transform the presidency from largely ceremonial to an executive post with expansive powers.
IMMUNITY
Davutoglu said parliament will begin debate on revoking the parliamentary immunity for lawmakers from the opposition Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), which has Kurdish roots, after budget talks conclude on Wednesday.
The Justice Ministry last week submitted a request for the assembly to scrap the protection from prosecution of five HDP lawmakers, including the HDP's co-leaders, Selahattin Demirtas and Figen Yuksekdag, after repeated calls by Erdogan.
The ultra-right Nationalist Movement Party, parliament's fourth-biggest grouping with 40 seats, has signalled its support for stripping Demirtas and the others of their immunity.
Demirtas, who faces some 60 dossiers for things he has said, told reporters at a briefing the AKP was using the issue to tap nationalist support during a time of clashes between security forces and Kurdish militants in Turkey's restive southeast.
"The government has raised the issue of our immunity before, but this time they appear serious," he said. "They want to scapegoat us. We don't want this to happen because not only will it hurt our party but all of Turkish society and its democracy."
Even if parliament lifts the lawmakers' immunity, the HDP will retain its 59 seats until any prosecution is complete, which could take years, Demirtas said.
He also reiterated the HDP's opposition to an executive presidency, saying it would make the government more autocratic.
Opposition parties want the new charter to focus on minority rights and democratic freedoms and fear an executive presidency would consolidate too much power in the hands of one man.
But Davutoglu said the AKP would prioritise such rights.
"Issues that are inarguable are human rights and freedoms, a liberal constitutional framework, accountability and representational ability," he said.
The ruling AKP party will have the support of all its 317 deputies for a new charter and will look for an additional 13 votes from the opposition that are needed to take the draft to a referendum, Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview with broadcaster A Haber.
A cross-party commission charged with drafting a new constitution collapsed last month after the main opposition pulled out over attempts by the AKP to change Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential system.
"All 317 AK Party lawmakers will do what's necessary. The constitution is not up for bargaining, it's a matter of principles," Davutoglu said. "We will find the 330 (votes) and take it to a referendum. Our people will have a constitution embraced by all, and the (current) charter will be consigned."
Senior AKP officials told Reuters last week that the party was working on its own proposals despite the opposition's resistance, plans which could hand President Tayyip Erdogan powers to draft legislation directly and pick ministers.
The AKP has broad support for overhauling the constitution, which dates back to the period after the 1980 military coup and has been repeatedly amended. But there are wide divergences over what a new charter should look like.
Erdogan wants the charter to transform the presidency from largely ceremonial to an executive post with expansive powers.
IMMUNITY
Davutoglu said parliament will begin debate on revoking the parliamentary immunity for lawmakers from the opposition Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), which has Kurdish roots, after budget talks conclude on Wednesday.
The Justice Ministry last week submitted a request for the assembly to scrap the protection from prosecution of five HDP lawmakers, including the HDP's co-leaders, Selahattin Demirtas and Figen Yuksekdag, after repeated calls by Erdogan.
The ultra-right Nationalist Movement Party, parliament's fourth-biggest grouping with 40 seats, has signalled its support for stripping Demirtas and the others of their immunity.
Demirtas, who faces some 60 dossiers for things he has said, told reporters at a briefing the AKP was using the issue to tap nationalist support during a time of clashes between security forces and Kurdish militants in Turkey's restive southeast.
"The government has raised the issue of our immunity before, but this time they appear serious," he said. "They want to scapegoat us. We don't want this to happen because not only will it hurt our party but all of Turkish society and its democracy."
Even if parliament lifts the lawmakers' immunity, the HDP will retain its 59 seats until any prosecution is complete, which could take years, Demirtas said.
He also reiterated the HDP's opposition to an executive presidency, saying it would make the government more autocratic.
Opposition parties want the new charter to focus on minority rights and democratic freedoms and fear an executive presidency would consolidate too much power in the hands of one man.
But Davutoglu said the AKP would prioritise such rights.
"Issues that are inarguable are human rights and freedoms, a liberal constitutional framework, accountability and representational ability," he said.
© Thomson Reuters 2016
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