Gul has laughed off suggestions that he harbours a secret Islamist agenda [AFP]
Abdullah Gul, the current foreign minister, has been formally sworn in as Turkey's president.
He is the first former Islamist to win the post in Turkey's modern history.
In contrast to past
inaugurations, army chiefs, some of the secular establishment and the
main opposition Republican People's party stayed away from the ceremony
on Tuesday.
Gul's wife, who wears a headscarf, which is banned in the country's public institutions, also stayed away.
Political analysts
said that Gul faces an important test in allaying fears that his term
will raise the role of religion in public life.
Parliament began
voting at 3pm (1200 GMT), and the ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP), which holds 341 seats in the 550-member parliament, had no
trouble in installing Gul, 56, as president.
The AKP only
needed an absolute majority to secure the post. In the previous two
rounds in the chamber, they failed because a two-thirds majority was
required.
Two other candidates also stood for president.
'Fear-mongering'
General
Yasar Buyukanit, Turkey's armed forces chief, said on Monday he saw
"centres of evil" seeking to undermine the secular republic, a
statement suggesting the army would not stand on the sidelines if it
saw the separation between mosque and state threatened.
"The
Turkish armed forces will not make any concessions ... in its duty of
guarding the Turkish Republic, a secular and social state based on the
rule of law," he said in a written message.
Barnaby
Phillips, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Ankara, said: "The army sees
itself as the guardian of the secular constitution [but] Gul laughs off
suggestions that he harbours a secret Islamist agenda."
The Milliyet
newspaper said: "Gul's election will be a turning point in our
political history that could draw us one step closer to democratic
maturity."
Liberals
dismiss concerns over the secular system - a defining feature of the
Turkish republic - as "fear-mongering" undertaken by political rivals
unable to match the AKP's rising popularity.
From Gul's first speech as president
"Secularism - one of the main principles of
our republic - is a pre-condition for social peace as much as it is a
liberating model for different lifestyles.
"As long as I am in office, I will embrace
all our citizens without any bias. I will preserve my impartiality with
the greatest of care."
They
see Gul's presidency as symbolic of the rise of the conservative and
impoverished masses who form the backbone of the AKP - people who have
long been kept at the margins of politics by the army-backed secularist
elite, critics argue.
Turkey's popular Vatan
newspaper said: "Gul will not have an easy start. His every step ...
will be under scrutiny by institutions and sections of society who are
sensitive on secularism.
"Gul will neeed to be careful and make efforts to calm them."
'Secret agenda'
The headscarf debate has beleaguered Gul [AFP]
When
Gul first stood for the presidency in April, the opposition blocked his
election by boycotting parliament, while the army, which has ousted
four governments since 1960, warned the government that it was "ready
to defend" the secular order.
The
crisis forced Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, to call
early general elections on July 22, from which the AKP emerged with a
huge victory, hailing it as popular support to re-nominate Gul.
Opponents
charge that the AKP has a secret agenda to replace Turkey's secular
order with a regime more akin to an an Islamic republic.
Uncompromising
secularists are also irritated by the fact that Gul's wife wears the
Islamic headscarf, which they see as a symbol of defiance of the
secular system.
But a survey published in Milliyet
on Tuesday showed that the majority of Turks - 72.6 per cent - have no
objections to a first lady with a headscarf, while 19.8 per cent said
they would be annoyed if she covers up.
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