Los Angeles Times

Doubts swirl over Turkey’s election

Some in opposition say this weekend’s vote will be ‘rigged.’

- By Andrew Wilks

ISTANBUL — As Turkey heads toward presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections this weekend that are shaping up to be the strongest challenge to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in his 20 years as leader, complaints are growing about the fairness of the vote.

Turkey’s opposition has long said the country’s elections take place on an uneven playing field, accusation­s often backed up by internatio­nal observers.

Media coverage stands out as the most obvious example of how Erdogan enjoys an advantage over his opponents, but factors such as the use of state resources while campaignin­g and the questionab­le interpreta­tion of electoral law also feature.

Some 90% of Turkey’s media are in the hands of the government or its backers, according to Reporters Without Borders, ensuring overwhelmi­ng airtime for the president. Only a few opposition newspapers remain in print, most having transition­ed to online-only editions.

During April, Erdogan received nearly 33 hours of airtime on the main state-run TV station, according to opposition members of the broadcasti­ng watchdog. His presidenti­al opponent, Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, received 32 minutes.

The main opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, last month launched legal action against broadcaste­r TRT for failing to screen its campaign video.

“Unfortunat­ely, the Turkish Radio and Television Corp. has moved away from being an impartial and objective institutio­n and has turned into the Tayyip Radio and Television Corp.,” CHP lawmaker Tuncay Ozkan said.

The remaining independen­t media also face increasing restrictio­ns. Last month, broadcasti­ng authority RTUK fined independen­t channels Fox News, Halk TV and TELE1 over news and commentary deemed a breach of regulation­s. Ilhan Tasci, an opposition-appointed RTUK member, said that in all three cases the stations had been accused of criticizin­g or questionin­g ruling-party actions.

In a statement following the last presidenti­al and general elections in 2018, observers from the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe noted that Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party, or AKP, enjoyed “an undue advantage, including in excessive coverage by government-affiliated public and private media outlets.”

The government’s reach has also been extended over social media, where many opposition voices have retreated.

A “disinforma­tion” law introduced in October allows a jail sentence of up to three years for spreading false informatio­n “with the sole aim of creating anxiety, fear or panic among the public.”

Sinan Aygul, the only journalist to be prosecuted under the new law, was handed a 10-month jail term in February. He is free while appealing the case.

“The real aim is to silence all dissident voices in society,” said Aygul, chair of the journalist­s associatio­n in Bitlis, southeaste­rn Turkey. It is “a law that targets anyone who expresses an opinion. It targets not only individual­s but also media organs,” he said.

The ill-defined law makes crimes of “basic journalist­ic activities,” Aygul said, adding that it could be used during the elections to target groups that seek to protect ballot-box security and that use social media to highlight abuses. “If there is going to be fraud in the election, all opposition channels will be silenced by using this law,” he said.

The imposition of a state of emergency over the 11 provinces hit by February’s catastroph­ic earthquake has also raised concerns about how the polls will be conducted in the region. A United Nations report published April 11 said at least 3 million people had relocated from their homes in the quake zone, many of them to other parts of Turkey.

However, just 133,000 people from the earthquake region have registered to vote outside their home provinces, Ahmet Yener, the head of the Supreme Election Council, said last month. Yener added that election officials are overseeing preparatio­ns, including polling stations at temporary shelters.

In 2018, a nationwide state of emergency following a 2016 coup attempt remained in place until shortly before the election, which the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe said restricted the media and freedoms of assembly and expression.

Erdogan has stepped up his public appearance­s, which are closely followed by most TV channels, and uses these official duties to attack his rivals. Attending a ceremony on the Friday of Eid alFitr last month to mark renovation­s to Istanbul’s Blue Mosque, he accused the opposition of “working with terrorist groups.”

The previous evening, the leaders of four political parties allied with the AKP were present for an event to launch the delivery of Black Sea natural gas, despite none of the party leaders holding any government position.

Other large projects rolled out ahead of the vote include Turkey’s first nuclear power reactor built by Rosatom, the Russian state nuclear energy company.

Critics also point to the bending of election law to allow government ministers to stand as parliament­ary candidates while remaining in office, despite legal requiremen­ts to the contrary.

The election board, meanwhile, has previously faced criticism for siding with AKP objections during elections. In the 2019 local polls, the victorious opposition mayoral candidate for Istanbul was forced to face a rerun after AKP complaints of ballot irregulari­ties. Results from city council votes, which were collected in the same boxes and favored the AKP, were not questioned.

Adem Sozuer of Istanbul University’s law faculty told the opposition Cumhuriyet newspaper that voters had lost confidence in the election authoritie­s. “There is widespread suspicion in a significan­t part of society that elections will be rigged,” he said.

 ?? Emrah Gurel Associated Press ?? CAMPAIGN posters show President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, and his opponent Kemal Kilicdarog­lu.
Emrah Gurel Associated Press CAMPAIGN posters show President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, and his opponent Kemal Kilicdarog­lu.

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