The Oklahoman

Erdogan claims victory in Turkey

- BY SUZAN FRASER, ELENA BECATOROS AND ZEYNEP BILGINSOY

ISTANBUL — Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared victory after unofficial election returns Sunday showed him with enough votes to serve another term that carries new executive powers.

“The nation has entrusted to me the responsibi­lity of the presidency and the executive duty,” Erdogan said in televised remarks from Istanbul after a near-complete count carried by the staterun news agency gave him the majority needed to avoid a runoff.

The presidenti­al election and a parliament­ary election also held Sunday, both more than a year early, complete NATO-member Turkey’s transition from a parliament­ary system of government to a strong presidenti­al system. Voters approved the change in a referendum last year.

Erdogan, 64, insisted before the election that the expanded powers — which include the authority to impose states of emergency and to issue decrees — would bring prosperity and stability to Turkey, especially after a failed military coup attempt in 2016. A state of emergency has been in place since the coup.

The president’s critics, however, warned that Erdogan’s re-election would cement the grip on power of a leader who they accuse of showing increasing­ly autocratic tendencies.

Official results were to be declared by the country’s electoral board.

Results carried by the state-run Anadolu news agency with more than 96 percent of ballot boxes counted showed Erdogan winning an outright majority of 52.6 percent, far ahead of the 30.75 percent for his main contender, the secular Muharrem Ince.

Kurdish candidate Selahattin Demirtas, who ran his campaign from prison where he is being held pending trial on terrorism-related charges, was garnering 8.1 percent. He has called the charges trumped-up and politicall­y motivated.

However, Ince said the results carried on Anadolu were not a true reflection of the official vote count by the country’s electoral board. In a tweet earlier in the evening, he said only 37 percent of ballot boxes had actually been counted, as opposed to the more than nearly 90 percent Anadolu was reporting at the time. He accused the agency of “manipulati­on” of the results.

Erdogan also declared victory for the People’s Alliance, an electoral coalition between his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party and the small Nationalis­t Movement Party, saying they had a “parliament­ary majority” in the 600-member assembly.

The unofficial results for the parliament­ary election showed Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party, or AKP, losing its majority, with 293 seats in the 600seat legislatur­e. However, the small nationalis­t party the AKP was allied with garnered 49 seats.

“Even though we could not reach out goal in parliament, God willing we will be working to solve that with all our efforts in the People’s Alliance,” Erdogan told cheering supporters outside his official residence in Istanbul.

The pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party, or HDP, was passing the 10 percent threshold required to enter parliament with 11.2 percent. Managing to get into parliament would be a significan­t for HDP, since nine of its lawmakers, including Demirtas, and thousands of party members were jailed during the campaign.

The party said more than 350 of its election workers have been detained since April 28.

Ince, speaking just after polls closed, warned civil servants involved in the vote count to do their jobs “abiding by the law” and without fear, suggesting they were under pressure by the government. He asked all Turks to be vigilant at polls and not be “demoralize­d” by what he called the possible manipulati­on of news.

 ??  ?? Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Recep Tayyip Erdogan

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