The Borneo Post

Erdogan’s rival faces uphill struggle after breakthrou­gh

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ANKARA: Nationalis­t Meral Aksener may have broken the mould by challengin­g Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan for the presidency barely eight months after creating a new party but she faces an uphill struggle to even be the top opposition candidate.

The first woman to stand for the presidency in Turkish history, Aksener, 61, broke away from the Nationalis­t Movement Party (MHP) that dominated nationalis­t politics for the last half-century and in October launched her own faction — the Iyi Parti (Good Party).

While the MHP and its longstandi­ng leader Devlet Bahceli, 70, formed an alliance with Erdogan for the June 24 election, Aksener moved in outright opposition to the Turkish strongman.

The formation of the new party was seen as a tectonic shift in Turkish politics, given the importance of the nationalis­t electorate, with many analysts saying she has a decent chance of challengin­g Erdogan.

But with markedly little television airtime, Aksener faces a tough challenge to rally support especially with the other main opposition candidate, Muharrem Ince of the secular Republican People’s Party (CHP), gaining momentum.

And her reputation as a diehard nationalis­t and her past as exinterior minister means it is unlikely she will make inroads among the Kurdish minority who comprise around a fifth of the electorate.

“Looking at the election mathematic­s, Ince will most likely be the runner-up and Aksener will follow,” said Fuat Keyman, director of the Istanbul Policy Centre think tank.

If no candidate wins 50 per cent in the first round, there will a run-off vote between the two frontrunne­rs on July 8.

Odul Celep, associate professor of political science at Isik University in Istanbul, said it would likely be Ince rather than Aksener making it to a run-off.

Ince, he said, could both “solidify the party base but also rally more non-partisan, independen­t and floating voters around him”.

Aksener defines herself as a nationalis­t and committed follower of Turkey’s secular founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk yet also socially conservati­ve and a practising Muslim. She shies away from comparison­s to European far-right politician­s such as Front National’s Marine Le Pen in France.

She has also been challenged on her policy towards Syrian refugees in a country which is hosting some 3.5 million people who fled the Syrian civil war.

Aksener came under fire for saying that she would have an ‘iftar’ meal which breaks the daily fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan with Syrians in 2019 — but only in their homeland.

Known for her fiery rhetoric and dubbed by some foreign media as Turkey’s ‘iron lady’, Aksener has denied suggesting refugees be thrown out.

As part of her campaign, she has promised to end a string of measures put in place by Erdogan, such as the state of emergency imposed after the failed coup of 2016, and the block on Wikipedia.

She has also pledged to scrap the presidenti­al system due to take effect after the vote.

“She portrays herself as the antidote to the ills that are plaguing Turkey today and is focusing her campaign on rectified governance, justice and accountabi­lity,” Anthony Skinner, Mena director at risk consultanc­y Verisk Maplecroft, told AFP.

According to Celep, Aksener has qualities that form a ‘unique combinatio­n’ as an urban, secular, educated figure with her roots very much in the right wing of Turkish politics.

But her biggest stumbling block may be winning over the Kurds, who are wary of her nationalis­m and have bitter memories of her 1996-97 stint as interior minister

during the deadliest years of the Kurdish insurgency in the southeast. During her campaign, Aksener called for the release of the jailed Selahattin Demirtas, the imprisoned candidate for the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) and its former leader. “How will Turkey account for this competitiv­e inequality?” she said, insisting he should be free to campaign. But HDP’s co-leader has vowed Aksener would not win any Kurdish votes. “Starting with me, no Kurd will give their vote to Mrs Aksener,” Pervin Buldan told the Gazete Duvar news website. “This absolutely will not happen.”

So far, Aksener has been ‘shy’ to openly cite Turkey’s Kurdish minority as ‘an issue’ or make references to their identity or ethnicity, Celep said.

But among Kurds and some leftists there was a ‘negative perception’ of Aksener, whose chances were likely to be affected by “her time as minister and because she is a Turkish nationalis­t,” said Ozer Sencar, chairman of the Metropoll pollster.

Looking at the election mathematic­s, Ince will most likely be the runner-up and Aksener will follow. — Fuat Keyman, director of Istanbul Policy Centre think tank.

 ??  ?? People gather outside the headquarte­rs of pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) during an election campaign in Diyarbakir.
People gather outside the headquarte­rs of pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) during an election campaign in Diyarbakir.
 ??  ?? Muharrem meets with members of Muslim community in Komotini, Greece.
Muharrem meets with members of Muslim community in Komotini, Greece.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Supporters of Aksener hold Turkish  ags during an election campaign meeting in Ankara.
— AFP photo Supporters of Aksener hold Turkish ags during an election campaign meeting in Ankara.
 ?? — Reuters photos ?? Erdogan addresses his supporters during an election rally in Adiyaman, Turkey.
— Reuters photos Erdogan addresses his supporters during an election rally in Adiyaman, Turkey.
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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Aksener speaks during an election campaign meeting in Ankara.
— AFP photo Aksener speaks during an election campaign meeting in Ankara.
 ??  ?? Supporters of pro- Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) holdpictur­esofSelaha­ttin Demirtas, the party’s jailed former coleader and the candidate in the presidenti­al snap election, during an election campaign in Diyarbakir. Erdogan addresses his...
Supporters of pro- Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) holdpictur­esofSelaha­ttin Demirtas, the party’s jailed former coleader and the candidate in the presidenti­al snap election, during an election campaign in Diyarbakir. Erdogan addresses his...

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