Daily Camera (Boulder)

Issues loom as Turkey heads to runoff presidenti­al race

- By Suzan Fraser The Associated Press

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has parlayed his country’s NATO membership and location straddling Europe and the Middle East into internatio­nal influence, is favored to win reelection in a presidenti­al runoff Sunday, despite a host of domestic issues.

Erdogan, 69, who has amassed greater powers during his 20 years in office, finished a first-round election on May 14 just short of a victory and also retained a majority in parliament. That came despite rampant inflation and the aftermath of a catastroph­ic earthquake that killed over 50,000 people in the country’s south.

His challenger in the runoff is Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, the 74-year-old leader of the main opposition social democratic Republican People’s Party and the joint candidate of a six-party alliance, who has promised to undo years of democratic backslidin­g under Erdogan, to repatriate Syrian refugees and promote rights of women.

Here’s a look at the main domestic issues shaping the election, and where Erdogan and his challenger stand:

The alliance has outlined plans for a greater separation of powers, including an increased role for parliament and an independen­t judiciary.

Kilicdarog­lu has also promised to do away with a law that makes insulting the president a criminal offense punishable by prison. He has pledged to abide by decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, which have called for the release of former pro-kurdish party co-chair Selahattin Demirtas and philanthro­pist businessma­n and human rights activist Osman Kavala from prison.

But lacking a parliament­ary majority, Kilicdarog­lu would face an uphill battle implementi­ng the democratic reforms even if he is elected. “deviants.”

The Kilicdarog­lu-led alliance has vowed to rejoin the European treaty and to uphold the rights of women and minority communitie­s. Kilicdarog­lu has also reached out to conservati­ve women, assuring them they will be able to continue wearing Islamic-style headscarve­s that were once banned in schools and government offices under Turkey’s secular laws.

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