Turkey's
opposition failed on Thursday to have the results of a local election in
Ankara canceled in an attempt to salvage some victory from nationwide
polls that proved a triumph for Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan. Turkey's High Election Board
refused an appeal by the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
for a re-run of the March 30 Ankara result on allegations of
irregularities in the count. A
reversal of the Ankara result would be little more than a consolation
prize for the opposition, which failed to dent Erdogan's support
nationally in a vote that became a referendum on his rule as he battles
allegations of corruption. Erdogan dismisses the allegations as politically motivated. A
senior CHP official told Reuters its Ankara candidate would now take
the case to the Constitutional Court, although Justice Minister Bekir
Bozdag said on Tuesday any election board decision would be final. "After
what we've heard from the justice minister, I'm not very confident
about the constitutional court. The European Court of Human Rights is
the last and only option," a CHP adviser said. No
official results have been announced, but informal tallies from Turkish
news channels put the Erdogan's AK Party at 45 percent nationwide,
compared to 28 percent for the CHP. In
Ankara, incumbent mayor Melih Gokcek of the AKP secured 44.6 percent of
the votes, narrowly beating CHP nominee Mansur Yavas on 43.8 percent. Later
on Wednesday the election board told vote organizers in the
northwestern province of Yalova to investigate a complaint from AK Party
that there has been irregularities there, Hurriyet newspaper reported. AK lost that mayoral election to CHP, according to informal tallies of the result reported in the media.
Election board rejects Turkish opposition call for Ankara re-run
Reuters
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