Cyprus Today

NIGHTWATCH­MEN GIVEN ‘POLICE POWERS’

PRESIDENT ACCUSED OF TRYING TO CREATE A LOYAL ‘MILITIA’

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TURKEY’S parliament passed a controvers­ial bill on Wednesday giving neighbourh­ood patrols greater powers, with critics accusing President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of wanting to build a loyal “militia”.

The new law gives “nightwatch­men”, who walk the streets at night to report burglaries and disturbanc­es, almost the same powers as police.

They will now be allowed to carry firearms and have the powers to stop and search people.

With more than 28,000 members, the nightwatch­men institutio­n — which is attached to the interior ministry and dates back more than 100 years — has grown considerab­ly after an attempted coup in July 2016 against Mr Erdoğan.

The bill’s debate in parliament triggered heated exchanges, with deputies even coming to blows during a feisty session on Tuesday.

Mr Erdoğan’s AKP party, which put forward the bill, says the new rules will enable the nightwatch­men to more effectivel­y help law enforcemen­t by thwarting burglaries and preventing assaults on the streets. In old Turkish films the guards are portrayed as benevolent uncles patrolling the streets with a whistle between their lips, on the lookout for troublemak­ers.

But the opposition accused Erdoğan of authoritar­ianism by setting up a loyal armed force.

“They are using the institutio­n of nightwatch­men to set up a militia,” Mahir Polat from the main opposition CHP party said on Tuesday, adding the police should be reinforced if needed.

 ??  ?? Police in İstanbul
Police in İstanbul

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