Khaleej Times

Turkey opposition calls for cancellati­on of referendum

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ankara — Turkey’s opposition on Tuesday demanded the annulment of a contentiou­s referendum that approved sweeping constituti­onal changes boosting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s powers, claiming blatant vote-rigging.

The European Union also urged a probe into the poll fraud claims after internatio­nal observers voiced concerns, but US President Donald Trump called his Turkish counterpar­t to offer his congratula­tions.

Critics fear the changes will lead to autocratic one-man rule under Erdogan, but supporters say they simply put Turkey in line with France and the United States and are needed for efficient government.

The ‘Yes’ camp won Sunday’s poll with just 51.41 per cent of the vote but the result has been challenged, with opposition claims of vote rigging and angry protests staged in parts of the biggest city Istanbul.

The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy leader Bulent Tezcan formally requested that the Supreme Election Board (YSK) cancel the result.

The changes, most of which are due to come into force after November 2019, are some of the most far-reaching in Turkey since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk establishe­d the modern state in the ashes of the Ottoman Empire in 1923.

The opposition is particular­ly incensed by a last-minute move by the YSK to accept ballot documents in envelopes without an official stamp.

“This is was an election without legitimacy,” Tezcan said after delivering the complaint to YSK headquarte­rs in Ankara, claiming there was an organised campaign for the “stealing of the people’s will”.

“There is only one thing to do... and that’s to annul the referendum,” he added.

In an interview with the Hurriyet daily, CHP chief Kemal Kilicdarog­lu charged that the YSK “changed the rules of the game during the match”.

Internatio­nal observers on Monday echoed some of the opposition

This was an election without legitimacy. There was an organised campaign for the stealing of the people’s will. There is only one thing to do... and that’s to annul the referendum. Bulent Tezcan, Deputy leader of Republican People’s Party

concerns, enraging Erdogan. The joint mission of OSCE Office for Democratic Institutio­ns and Human Rights (ODIHR) and the Parliament­ary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) said the YSK move on the stamps “removed an important safeguard”.

After a lopsided campaign that saw the ‘Yes’ camp dominate the airwaves, the observers also complained that the campaign was conducted on an “unlevel playing field”.

But speaking to thousands of supporters in a triumphant address outside his presidenti­al palace, Erdogan told the mission to “know your place”, saying Turkey had no intention of paying any attention to the report. Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told his ruling party in Ankara on Tuesday that “everyone has to respect the result, including the main opposition party”. “It’s wrong to say something after the nation has spoken,” he said. The new system would dispense with the prime minister’s post and centralise the entire executive bureaucrac­y under the president, giving Erdogan the direct power to appoint ministers.

But the ‘Yes’ vote has even wider implicatio­ns for Turkey, which joined Nato in 1952 and in the last half century has been engaged in a stalled bid to join the European Union. Erdogan reaffirmed he would now hold talks on reinstatin­g capital punishment — a move that would automatica­lly end Turkey’s EU bid — and would call another referendum if the bill did not get enough votes in parliament to become law.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said that if Ankara were to bring back the death penalty, the move would be “synonymous with the end of the European dream” for Turkey.

EU Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas also called on the Turkish authoritie­s “to launch transparen­t investigat­ions into these alleged irregulari­ties found by the observers”.

In contrast to the tensions with the EU, Trump called Erdogan to “congratula­te him on his recent referendum victory”, the White House said in a statement.

Turkish presidenti­al sources quoted the US leader as saying: “I attach importance to our friendship and we have a lot of work to do together.”—

 ?? AFP ?? A woman holds a banner reading, ‘Dear Ataturk, honesty didn’t work again’ as people queue outside the High Electoral Board in Ankara calling for the annulment of the referendum. —
AFP A woman holds a banner reading, ‘Dear Ataturk, honesty didn’t work again’ as people queue outside the High Electoral Board in Ankara calling for the annulment of the referendum. —

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