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Appeals and recounts spark frustration in Istanbul

Post-election crisis continues to divide political parties

By Reuters - Apr 15,2019 - Last updated at Apr 15,2019

Istanbul mayoral defeated candidate Binali Yildirim (back, centre), of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), speaks during a press conference at the AKP's headquarters, in Istanbul, on Monday (AFP photo)

ANKARA — Electoral officials ordered a second recount of votes in an east Istanbul district on Monday, after two weeks of appeals by President Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) against results showing it had narrowly lost control of Turkey's largest city.

Repeated AKP challenges to the initial results have led to growing frustration among supporters of the main opposition, the Republican People’s Party  (CHP), which spilled over onto the football terraces at the weekend when Istanbul's top teams played two derby matches.

"Give the mandate, give Imamoglu the mandate now," fans of Besiktas and Fenerbahce chanted, as their teams played current league leaders Basaksehir, whom Erdogan has said he supports, and runners-up Galatasaray.

The secularist CHP’s mayoral candidate Ekrem Imamoglu, who attended both matches, holds a slim lead of around 0.2 percentage points over his AKP rival, former prime minister Binali Yildirim, according to initial results of the March 31 local elections.

The loss of Ankara ended 25 years of control over the capital by the AKP and its Islamist predecessors. Defeat in Istanbul, where Erdogan was mayor in the 1990s, would be an even greater blow to the president who has dominated Turkish politics through a decade and half of repeated election triumphs. 

On Monday electoral officials in the Maltepe district of Istanbul, where a recount of votes in 1,089 ballot boxes had already been under way for nearly a week, ruled for a fresh recount after an appeal by the AKP and their nationalist MHP allies, broadcaster NTV said.

The appeal centred around an AKP objection to the additional teams brought in to speed up the recount, and means more than half the votes in the district must be recounted again. 

The AKP has already filed several other objections across Istanbul and has appealed to annul the elections in another district, Buyukcekmece.

The High Election Board (YSK) has said it would wait for all recounts across the city to be completed before ruling on the AKP's appeal to annul results in Buyukcekmece.

After that it may have to rule on a call by Erdogan — not yet formally submitted by the AKP — for the entire Istanbul election to be annulled over what the party said were irregularities that affected the outcome.

An appeal for an annulment of the entire Istanbul election could probably be lodged only after the YSK has announced the final results.

 

Opposition wants faster counts 

 

CHP lawmaker Baris Yarkdas said his party has asked the YSK to consider previous recounts as valid and to speed up recounts across Istanbul by forming 100 new counting teams.

"The AKP-MHP was planning to get different results by having the ballot boxes in Maltepe recounted. When the results did not come out as they wished, they are now not signing the record sheets of the judges [officials] so the count can't be finished," Yarkdas said on Twitter.

He said the AKP and MHP were driving the process into an impasse, and putting public servants under pressure. "The party state is crushing the law," he said.

MHP leader Devlet Bahceli appeared to criticise Imamoglu for mixing sport with politics by attending the weekend matches.

"Carrying the mandate to the stadium is a seed planted to turn the competition between the sides into animosity. He can't be mayor," he said.

Imamoglu responded: "I told my friends I would attend these games before the elections. Are Galatasaray, Fenerbahce and Besiktas not teams of this city? I will go."

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