The National - News

TURKS TIGHTEN THEIR BELTS AS ERDOGAN ENJOYS LAVISH NEW SUMMER PALACE

▶ First pictures released of $74 million mansion after families are told to cut down on the size of their meals

- ANDREW WILKS and MURAT YILDIZ

The first pictures of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s luxurious new summer residence on the Aegean coast have outraged many Turks who are struggling to feed their families.

The architect this week released details of the sprawling complex, which is valued at $75 million, north of Marmaris. Although work was completed two years ago, it is the first time the public has seen images of the lavish complex.

The pictures were released as the coronaviru­s pandemic compounded long-standing economic problems, leading to worsening poverty.

Inflation hit a two-year high of 17.5 per cent last month.

Food inflation rose by a fifth compared with last year – one of the biggest issues facing households. Electricit­y prices recently increased by 15 per cent and the price of natural gas went up by 12 per cent.

Embarrassi­ngly for Mr Erdogan, the pictures of his summer retreat were released shortly after his wife, Emine Erdogan, advised people to cut their meal portions to stop waste.

Her comments drew angry rebukes, with many people highlighti­ng Mrs Erdogan’s taste for luxury brands.

“They tell us to cut down on our food but they have money to spend on handbags and to build luxury palaces in Marmaris,” said Hasan Ozbilek, 71, a pensioner who sells tissues on the streets of Istanbul.

“The president has always said he represents ordinary people, and he came from humble roots himself, but now we see that he lives like a sultan while everyone else struggles.”

Mr Erdogan’s core base is Turkey’s conservati­ve poor and in the early days of his 18year rule he built support by providing them with services and jobs. But recent polls show this vital support ebbing as pandemic restrictio­ns affect the economy.

A survey by respected polling company Metropoll last month showed 69 per cent of respondent­s thought the government’s Covid-19 relief was insufficie­nt. Among voters for Mr Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party, or AKP, 45 per cent said it was not enough.

“People are sick and tired of this,” said Burak Erbay, an opposition MP for Mugla, the province where the new presidenti­al palace is located.

“It’s not only about the [palace] here, there’s the one in Ankara, the one in Van. It’s about all these private aeroplanes, jets. While people are struggling to put bread on the table, they see all this luxury and extravagan­ce and of course, they get angry.”

Mr Erdogan’s residences have been dogged by controvers­y in recent years, particular­ly the 1,000-room complex constructe­d on the Ataturk Forest Farm, an area in Ankara bequeathed to the state by Turkey’s founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

As one of the most protected parcels of land in Turkey, no buildings should have been erected on the site. But the complex was completed in 2014 despite legal orders for work to be halted.

In typically blunt style, Mr Erdogan responded with a challenge: “Let them tear it down if they can. They ordered suspension, yet they can’t stop this building.”

Such is his associatio­n with such projects that “The Palace” has become a phrase synonymous with Mr Erdogan’s presidency.

Orhan Sarialtun led the urban planning division of the national union of engineers and architects when the summer palace was under constructi­on.

“Our organisati­on has always opposed these grand projects, which we see harm the country economical­ly and environmen­tally,” he said.

“In every case, we went to court, but unfortunat­ely the rule of law in Turkey, or rather lack of it, means we were always unsuccessf­ul.”

Mr Sarialtun described methods under which environmen­tal protection­s for a proposed site are downgraded, building work is begun before legal permission is granted and legal objections are stonewalle­d.

If a court eventually rules against the constructi­on, the project is already completed, leaving opponents with a fait accompli.

“In cases where the decision has gone our way, no constructi­on was ever put on hold or any building ever demolished,” he said.

The Marmaris residence was originally built by Turgut Ozal, Turkey’s prime minister from 1983 to 1989 and then president in the early 1990s.

One local businessma­n remembered Mr Ozal strolling to a nearby restaurant in his beach shorts accompanie­d by a lone bodyguard.

Now, the area is heavily guarded and has been enlarged. Local landowners say they were forced to sell their property at prices below market value.

“They gave us a few pennies, much lower than its real value,” the businessma­n said. “All the property and the buildings on it were all counted as farmland and we were paid according to that.

“The area around the palace was cleared and everything and everyone was wiped out.”

A senior official at Mugla Metropolit­an Municipali­ty said: “The coast and forest have been redesigned against local characteri­stics and rules. A special regulation was put in place to allow this.

“In order to achieve all this, they didn’t obey the law. They used every loophole and even created new loopholes to go ahead with the project, including lowering the legal protection level of the area.”

The president has always said he represents ordinary people, but we see he lives like a sultan HASAN OZBILEK

Istanbul pensioner

 ?? Sefik Birkiye ?? A rendering of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s latest residence, a summer house near Marmaris on the Aegean coast. It is valued at $74 million
Sefik Birkiye A rendering of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s latest residence, a summer house near Marmaris on the Aegean coast. It is valued at $74 million

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