Cape Times

Turkey’s Erdogan talks tough Wins referendum by slim count

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AN EMBOLDENED Recep Tayyip Erdogan followed his win in a referendum that ratified the supremacy of his rule by taking aim at political opponents at home and abroad.

At his victory speech late on Sunday, supporters chanted that he should bring back the death penalty – a move that would finish off Turkey’s bid to join the EU – and Erdogan warned opponents not to bother challengin­g his win.

Turkey’s president told them to prepare for the biggest overhaul of the country’s system of governance ever, one that will result in him having even fewer checks on his already considerab­le power.

“Today, Turkey has made a historic decision,” he said. “We will change gears and continue along our course more quickly.”

The success of a package of 18 changes to the constituti­on was narrow, with about 51.4% of Turks approving it.

It came at the end of a divisive two-month campaign during which Erdogan accused opponents of the vote of supporting “terrorists”.

“The referendum campaign was dominated by strongly anti-Western rhetoric and repeated promises to bring back the death penalty,” said Inan Demir, an economist at Nomura Holdings in London.

“One hopes this rhetoric will be tempered now that the vote is over,” but recent steps by the Turkish government “do not bode well for the hoped-for moderation in internatio­nal relations”.

Most of the changes won’t take effect until after the next presidenti­al election in November 2019.

While markets looked favourably on the result as a sign political turmoil in the majority Muslim nation of 80 million people may settle down and help jump-start the economy, Turkey’s biggest political party alleged fraud, demanding a recount.

The EU’s rapporteur on Turkey, Kati Piri, said that given the “unfair election environmen­t”, EU accession talks will be suspended if the constituti­on is passed in its current form. The European Commission said the constituti­onal amendments, and their implementa­tion “will be assessed in light of Turkey’s obligation­s” as an accession candidate and as a member of the Council of Europe.

French presidenti­al candidate Emmanuel Macron predicted that Turkey’s EU membership won’t progress in coming years.

“You saw how the West attacked. But despite this, the nation stood tall, didn’t get divided,” Erdogan told his supporters, while calling on Turks who opposed him to “stop tiring themselves out” and accept the course the country is headed on.

“Likewise, we want other countries and institutio­ns to respect the decision of our people. We expect those states that we call allies in particular to develop their relations with our country in line with our sensitivit­ies, especially in the fight against terror,” he said in Istanbul.

A majority of voters there and in Turkey’s other big cities voted against the switch from a parliament-led system of government to an executive presidency. Police dispersed dozens of people who protested the election results in Ankara, Istanbul and Izmir.

The result is a remarkable turnaround for a president who just nine months ago faced down an attempted military coup.

The uprising was quickly crushed and, armed with a popular mandate to consolidat­e his rule, Erodgan now has room to crack down further. In the nine months since imposing a state of emergency, he’s already fired more than 100 000 people and jailed 40 000, among them academics, journalist­s and judges.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim called the win the “the best answer” to foes including the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is waging an insurgency in south-east Turkey, and sympathise­rs of Fethullah Gulen, an influentia­l US-based Islamic preacher Erdogan blames for orchestrat­ing the coup bid.

The struggle against “internal and external enemies will intensify”, Yildirim said.

 ??  ?? Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talks to the media after his referendum victory.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talks to the media after his referendum victory.

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