Los Angeles Times

A 250-mile ‘March for Justice’

A Turkish opposition leader reaches Istanbul after 25 days, drawing hundreds of thousands to a protest.

- By Roy Gutman Gutman is a special correspond­ent.

ISTANBUL, Turkey — The leader of Turkey’s main opposition party Sunday drew hundreds of thousands of supporters to an Istanbul rally during which he called for the government to free jailed politician­s, teachers and others and end a state of emergency.

The rally came as Republican People’s Party leader Kemal Kilicdarog­lu completed a 25-day, more than 250-mile march from Ankara, the capital, to Istanbul called the “March for Justice.”

Many in the crowd carried signs reading “adalet,” justice.

“Hak, hukuk, adalet,” supporters chanted. Rights, law, justice.

Kilicdarog­lu told the crowd that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has steered Turkey away from democracy and toward autocratic, one-man rule.

Kilicdarog­lu said Erdogan’s response to an attempted coup last July was to stage a palace coup by declaring a state of emergency, in effect suspending the powers of the parliament and judiciary.

Kilicdarog­lu’s demands included an end to the state of emergency, the restoratio­n of an independen­t judiciary and the release from custody of journalist­s, politician­s and others considered threats to the government. Tens of thousands of people have been arrested during the state of emergency.

“Subjecting the judiciary to partisan politics is a betrayal of democracy,” he said as he called on judges to “stand upright, stand with your honor, listen to your inner conscience and decide accordingl­y.”

“We demand justice. We demand justice not only for those who are gathered here, not only for those who support us, but for everyone,” he said. “Justice is a right. Justice is our right. We just want our right.”

He denounced as illegitima­te a referendum in April that will eliminate the post of prime minister and give the president the power to name his government, without requiring approval from the parliament, and expand his control over the judiciary.

The changes, set to take effect in 2019, would allow Erdogan to run for two additional five-year terms and possibly a third.

The constituti­onal referendum was carried out under the state of emergency, “where all public resources were exploited to manipulate the outcome,” Kilicdarog­lu said. “This was an … unlawful referendum. Turkey cannot and must not be governed with an illegal constituti­on.”

Erdogan had no immediate comment about the rally but had previously compared Kilicdarog­lu’s march to the coup attempt last year.

“What is the difference between you and the ones” involved in the attempted coup? he asked. “They were holding F-16s, tanks and you are walking.”

He also sought to ridicule Kilicdarog­lu for taking to the street. “If they think that this is the way they can reach justice, it is not possible,” Erdogan said. “Walking around with justice banners cannot bring justice. Don’t be surprised if justice visits you tomorrow.”

The government provided security for Kilicdarog­lu on his march, and thousands of police were protecting the site of the rally, on the parade grounds in Maltepe.

“There is no justice,” Muhammer Dogan, who joined the rally, told the Associated Press. “Innocent people are being imprisoned. They are being victimized.”

 ?? Chris McGrath Getty Images ?? KEMAL KILICDAROG­LU, leader of the Republican People’s Party, called for an end to Turkey’s state of emergency and the release of jailed politician­s and others.
Chris McGrath Getty Images KEMAL KILICDAROG­LU, leader of the Republican People’s Party, called for an end to Turkey’s state of emergency and the release of jailed politician­s and others.

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