Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Turkey Erdogan calls for snap elections on June 24

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TURKISH President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called for snap parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections to be held on June 24, more than a year earlier than planned.

In an address at his presidenti­al palace yesterday, Erdogan said the country urgently needed to make the switch to an executive presidency.

The date will still need to be confirmed by the election commission, he said, but preparatio­ns would begin.

His comments came after meeting Devlet Bahceli, head of the Nationalis­t Movement Party (MHP), who, a day earlier, had floated the prospect of early polls.

The parliament­ary and presidenti­al polls had previously been slated for November 2019.

The call for an early election comes as nationalis­t sentiment is running high over Turkey’s recent military operation in Syria that pushed Syrian Kurdish forces from a northern enclave.

Erdogan said during the address that the new system needs to be implemente­d quickly in order to deal with a series of challenges, including Turkey’s fight against Kurdish fighters in Syria and Iraq.

“Be it the cross-border operations in Syria, or incidents of historic importance centred in Syria and Iraq, they have made it imperative for Turkey to overcome uncertaint­ies quickly,” Erdogan said.

Ankara has labelled the Syrian Kurdish fighters “terrorists”, saying they are affiliated with an outlawed Kurdish group fighting inside Turkey.

With the upcoming election, Turkey will switch from a parliament­ary system to a presidenti­al one that will increase the powers of the president.

The system was changed in an April 2017 referendum that was narrowly won by the government’s “yes” camp.

The constituti­onal changes passed in the vote give the next president new powers to appoint vice presidents, ministers, high-level officials and senior judges. They also allow the president to dissolve parliament, issue executive decrees and impose states of emergency.

The snap elections were called a day after Bahceli made a surprise call for elections in the summer.

Bahceli argued that there is “no point in prolonging this any longer”, citing efforts by unnamed groups to foment chaos in Turkey.

Erdogan needs a 51 percent majority to be re-elected in the first round of the presidenti­al election.

Earlier this year, his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party), reached an election alliance with Bahceli’s MHP.

In a related developmen­t, Turkey’s parliament was scheduled to vote oyesterday on whether to prolong a state of emergency that was declared after a failed coup attempt in July 2016. Parliament was widely expected to extend the measure for a seventh time despite calls at home and abroad for it to end.

The European Union, which Ankara seeks to join, said in a report published on Tuesday that measures undertaken by Turkey under the almost two-year-old state of emergency have curtailed civil and political rights and called for its immediate lifting.

In response, Turkish officials accused the bloc of “bias” and “lacking empathy” over the “terror threat” faced by the country.

The government has asked parliament to extend the emergency decree, arguing that security threats from a movement led by US-based Muslim leader Fethullah Gulen, whom Turkey accuses of mastermind­ing the coup, have not abated. — Al Jazeera.

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