Daily Sabah (Turkey)

‘It is a crime and a sign of tutelage mentality’

President Erdoğan condemned main opposition Republican People’s Party Chairperso­n Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s recent move inviting the bureaucrac­y to oppose the elected government, saying it is a call for tutelage, a crime and a political failure

- ISTANBUL - DAILY SABAH

INVITING the bureaucrac­y to oppose the elected government is nothing but a call for tutelage, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said yesterday in reference to the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) Chair Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s recent threats.

Addressing reporters in Istanbul before departing for Angola on a four-day Africa diplomacy tour to Angola, Nigeria and Togo,

Erdoğan said that Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s recent threat to public officials is clearly a crime and a political failure.

Kılıçdaroğ­lu on Saturday in a video message shared on social media called on public officials not to follow the orders of the ruling government, saying: “I say clearly, you cannot serve the mafia order in the name of duty. You cannot consider illegal works as orders. You are honorable officers of this state, not the Erdoğan family. This is the last call of your brother Kılıçdaroğ­lu for you to come to mind. As of Monday, Oct. 18, the responsibi­lity of all your support to the illegal requests of this order will begin to belong to you. You can’t get away with this dirty work by saying ‘I have received orders.’ Whatever is being done to you illegally, stop by Monday.” “This statement is a clear admission that the CHP mentality is a tutelage mentality. Inviting the bureaucrac­y to oppose the elected government is nothing but a call for tutelage,” Erdoğan said in response.

“Turkey is a state of law. I remind Mr.

Kemal of this. It is not the field where Mr. Kemal plays games. Gone are the days when you were enthusiast­ic. Everyone, from the president to the lowest-ranking civil servant, has to do their duty in accordance with the law,” Erdoğan added.

He underlined that Turkey buried the tutelage and coup mentality a long time ago.

The Nation Alliance main opposition bloc led by the CHP and the Good Party (İP) has recently intensifie­d calls for an early election and a return to the parliament­ary system from the existing presidenti­al government system and has made political moves in this regard. After the Turkish lira plunged to a record low against the U.S. dollar last week, Kılıçdaroğ­lu visited the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) and held a meeting with its governor, Şahap Kavcıoğlu.

After the meeting, Kavcıoğlu said: “The central bank is strong, it makes the necessary decisions together with the Monetary Policy Committee, with its reserves and figures and its struggle for price stability.”

INVITING the bureaucrac­y to oppose the elected government is nothing but a call for tutelage, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said yesterday in reference to the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) Chair Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s recent threats.

Addressing reporters in Istanbul before departing for Angola on a four-day Africa diplomacy tour to Angola, Nigeria and Togo, Erdoğan said that Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s recent threat to public officials is clearly a crime and a political failure.

Kılıçdaroğ­lu on Saturday in a video message shared on social media called on public officials not to follow the orders of the ruling government, saying: “I say clearly, you cannot serve the mafia order in the name of duty. You cannot consider illegal works as orders. You are honorable officers of this state, not the Erdoğan family. This is the last call of your brother Kılıçdaroğ­lu for you to come to mind. As of Monday, Oct. 18, the responsibi­lity of all your support to the illegal requests of this order will begin to belong to you. You can’t get away with this dirty work by saying ‘I have received orders.’ Whatever is being done to you illegally, stop by Monday.”

“This statement is a clear admission that the CHP mentality is a tutelage mentality. Inviting the bureaucrac­y to oppose the elected government is nothing but a call for tutelage,” Erdoğan said in response.

“Turkey is a state of law. I remind Mr. Kemal of this. It is not the field where Mr. Kemal plays games. Gone are the days when you were enthusiast­ic. Everyone, from the president to the lowest-ranking civil servant, has to do their duty in accordance with the law,” Erdoğan added.

He underlined that Turkey buried the tutelage and coup mentality a long time ago.

The Nation Alliance main opposition bloc led by CHP and the Good Party (İP) has recently intensifie­d calls for an early election and a return to the parliament­ary system from the existing presidenti­al government system, making political moves in this regard.

After the Turkish lira plunged to a record low against the U.S. dollar last week, Kılıçdaroğ­lu visited the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) and held a meeting with its Governor Şahap Kavcıoğlu.

After the meeting, Kavcıoğlu said: “The central bank is strong, it takes the necessary decisions together with the Monetary Policy Committee, with its reserves and figures and its struggle for price stability.”

Additional­ly, the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office has launched an investigat­ion on its own motion about recent claims

by Kılıçdaroğ­lu that political murders may be committed in Turkey, a claim strongly rejected and condemned by officials, including Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu.

The investigat­ion followed recent allegation­s by Kılıçdaroğ­lu, who indirectly implied that the government may be planning political assassinat­ions.

“I have concerns about murders. Erdoğan

will do everything to stay in power,” Kılıçdaroğ­lu told journalist­s at a meeting in southern Mersin province last week.

It has been more than four years since Turkey switched from a parliament­ary system to the current presidenti­al system after the majority of Turkish voters opted to create the new system. Turkish voters narrowly endorsed an executive presidency in the April 16, 2017 referendum

with 51.4% of the votes in favor.

The official transition to the new system took place when Erdoğan took the presidenti­al oath of office in Parliament after the June 24, 2018, general elections, in which he won 52.6% of the votes.

The next presidenti­al and general elections are scheduled for 2023.

 ?? ?? President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan addresses reporters before departing for Angola, Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 17, 2021.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan addresses reporters before departing for Angola, Istanbul, Turkey, Oct. 17, 2021.

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