Six out of ten judges opted in favour of banning the party, stopping just one vote short of the two-thirds majority necessary for such a decision.
However, 10 out of 11 court members found the AKP guilty of being "a centre of anti-secular activities", a serious accusation in a country where the military had led several coups against governments that were allegedly trying to impose Islam as state religion.
The ruling, which will strip the party of half of its state funding, is meant to send a “serious warning” to the AKP to not question the country’s traditional separation between state and religion, Hasim Kilic, the court chairman read in his statement.
He also urged the other political parties to make the necessary legal arrangements to avoid any further party closure cases.
EU relief
The case was closely watched by the EU, which considered it not in line with the democratic standards expected of a potential EU member.
"In a normal European democracy, political issues are debated in the parliament and decided through the ballot box, not in the court rooms," Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn had said earlier in March.
The final judgment was greeted with relief by EU officials and observers alike, arguing it could serve to ease the power struggle between Islamic and secular forces in the country and could restore political stability.
Just three days before the ruling, two bombs detonated in Istanbul, killing at least 16 people and wounding more than 150 (EurActiv 28/07/08). No group has yet claimed responsibility, but the government was quick in blaming the terror group PKK.
At the same time, the country is faced with ongoing indictments against former secular elites called the Ergenekon group, charged with forming a terrorist group to overthrow the government (EurActiv 15/07/08), an event Prime Minister Erdogan was seeking to link to the closure case, saying not the state, but the AKP was under threat.




