Los Angeles Times

Turkish leader declares victory

Main opposition party challenges the results, alleging massive fraud in the referendum.

- By Roy Gutman

A vote gives him broad new powers, but critics cry foul.

ISTANBUL, Turkey — President Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed victory Sunday in his bid to replace Turkey’s parliament­ary democracy with an all-powerful “presidenti­al system,” and hinted that he may reinstitut­e the death penalty, a move that would all but end Turkey’s bid for membership in the European Union.

But the result of the national referendum was under challenge as the main opposition party charged that a last-minute change in the counting rules opened the way to massive fraud.

The package of 18 constituti­onal amendments will eliminate the post of prime minister and give the president the power to name his government, without requiring approval from the parliament. It will also expand his control over the judiciary, which is already largely subservien­t to Erdogan.

The changes, which would take effect in 2019, also would allow Erdogan to run for two additional five-year terms, and possibly a third. Opponents say the referendum could be the end of democracy in Turkey.

The vote was close. With all ballots counted, Erdogan had racked up 24.9 million “yes” votes to 23.6 million “no” votes, a ratio of 51.3% to 48.6%, according to the state-run Anadolu news agency.

The southeast of Turkey voted decisively against the changes, as did Aegean coastal districts. Also voting “no,” although by slimmer margins, were Istanbul, Ankara and other major cities.

But Erdogan’s Justice and Democracy Party swept nearly all of the Anatolian heartland, as it had in the last national parliament­ary elections in November.

According to the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, 2.5 million votes were suspect because they lacked the stamp of the Supreme Election Board, which oversees the elections, or were subject to other irregulari­ties.

The board, whose membership is dominated by members of Erdogan’s party, announced halfway through the voting that it had received complaints that envelopes containing the ballot papers were missing that stamp. But it ruled that the ballots would be declared invalid only if it could be proved that they were cast fraudulent­ly.

“The Supreme Election Board has changed the rules of the vote,” said Bulent Tezcan, a CHP deputy chairman. “This amounts to … allowing fraud in this vote.”

Erdal Aksunger, another deputy CHP leader, said 2.5 million votes are in dispute, and in some areas, such as the predominan­tly Kurdish southeast, almost half the votes could be challenged.

He estimated that 1.5 million unstamped envelopes and voting papers were given to voters, and there were also many incidents in which envelopes and voting papers were stamped after the ballots were opened.

“There are 2.5 million suspicious votes. Altogether, it seems this was a well-organized operation,” he told The Times.

Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, the CHP chairman, promised to challenge the board’s “contradict­ory” decision in the courts. “Election law stipulates that envelopes will be invalid without stamps,” he told supporters at the party’s Ankara headquarte­rs.

Erdogan declared victory before the election board had announced the result. Speaking of a “historic decision,” he said critics shouldn’t try to belittle the results. “It will be in vain,” he said.

And in remarks portending tense times ahead in Turkey’s relations with Europe, he responded to chants from the crowd calling for a reinstatem­ent of the death penalty, which Turkey dropped in 2004 as part of its bid to join the EU. Erdogan said he was ready for that issue and might even put it to a referendum.

If he proceeds, Turkey’s EU bid is in effect over. The EU insists that its members abolish the death penalty.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, sounding a more conciliato­ry note, declared that there were no losers in the referendum but that the Turkish nation had won.

“We are brothers, we are one body, we are one nation,” he said, appearing at the balcony of his official residence.

Kilicdarog­lu charged that the referendum had been staged under “unequal conditions” and that the outcome would do nothing to reconcile the country’s divisions.

“This referendum showed that at least 50% of the society says ‘no’ to that constituti­on,” he said.

The opposition leader himself is under fire for tepid leadership in comparison with the charismati­c Erdogan, and when he arrived at CHP headquarte­rs, a group awaiting him chanted that he should resign. But another faction quickly assembled and chanted, “Kilicdarog­lu, the hope of the people.”

A colleague said Kilicdarog­lu deliberate­ly kept his remarks low-key, fearing that if supporters’ emotions ran free, it could lead to clashes with Erdogan backers, causing deaths and even civil war.

Erdogan, who took the leading role in the campaign for a “yes” vote, claimed a presidenti­al system will be more efficient in addressing Turkey’s myriad security challenges. These include a Kurdish insurgency in the southeast, threats from Islamic State extremists based in neighborin­g Syria and the aftermath of a failed coup in July, which he has blamed on a Muslim preacher living in U.S. exile.

His opponents say the changes will lead to one-man rule and possibly a dictatorsh­ip.

Gutman is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Lefteris Pitarakis Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Recep Tayyip Erdogan had said replacing Turkey’s parliament­ary democracy with a “presidenti­al system” would help address security issues.
Lefteris Pitarakis Associated Press PRESIDENT Recep Tayyip Erdogan had said replacing Turkey’s parliament­ary democracy with a “presidenti­al system” would help address security issues.

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