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turkish election

'We want peace': Divided Turks vote in pivotal election

The polls have now closed and votes are being voted in Turkey’s pivotal election.

LAST UPDATE | 14 May 2023

THE POLLS HAVE now closed in Turkey in a knife-edge election that could end President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s grip on power after two decades. 

Voters have flocked to stations across the country to have their say in the pivotal election. 

First-time voter Ceren brimmed with excitement as she took selfies with her electoral ID card outside an Ankara polling station, as Turks flocked to the polls today for pivotal elections.

The 19-year-old student’s burning desire “for change” motivated her to arrive 30 minutes before voting opened, after more than two decades of rule by  Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted party.

Ceren is one of more than five million young voters eligible to cast ballots for the first time, a group that tends to embrace more liberal views and has only ever known one leader: Erdogan.

“I was born during this government. I saw to what point we arrived. I don’t want them anymore – enough,” she told AFP from the Turkish capital’s Cankaya district, traditionally a stronghold of the secular opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

In Istanbul, voters also queued early outside a school where Erdogan voted in the presidential and legislative polls, seen as Turkey’s most important in generations.

Recep Turktan, 67, refused to abandon his namesake and potentially hand power to Erdogan’s CHP rival Kemal Kilicdaroglu and his disparate six-party opposition alliance.

“What matters is not to divide Turkey. We will carry out our duty. I say, go on (with Erdogan),” Turktan told AFP, saying that economic difficulties currently afflicting the country were the same around the world.

  ‘We were governed well’

“We were already governed well and it will be better,” added Nurcan Soyer, a headscarf-wearing woman who backs Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), which has dominated Turkish politics since 2002.

erdogan at a rally yesterday Erdogan speaking at a rally yesterday.

But not everyone in the more conservative Uskudarneighbourhood, located on Istanbul’s Asian side, was prepared to forgive Erdogan for the economic crisis and the government’s mishandling of a cataclysmic February earthquake.

“We want democracy, a Turkey integrated with the world. We want to leave behind the problems originated from the earthquake and economy,” said Yuksel, who like many voters declined to state their surname.

Across the Bosphorus in European Istanbul, CHP supporter Ulvy Aminci, 58, wanted nothing short of “the French revolution: equality, liberty, fraternity”, saying the final three words in French.

“In the last 20 years, all of that disappeared,” added Aminci, one of thousands of volunteer election observers deployed nationwide across almost 200,000 polling stations.

  ‘We want peace’

During campaigning, tensions occasionally boiled over, with Istanbul’s opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu pelted with rocks and bottles while touring Turkey’s conservative heartland.

Fears of violence were starting to concern opposition supporter Hande Tekay, who said Turkey needed to “start from the basics” and “regain our dignity”.

The 55-year-old said she would not take to the streets to celebrate a Kilicdaroglu victory due to the risk of clashes.

Kilicdaroglu himself urged supporters to stay home if they win, warning that there may be “riots”.

“Fake news or not, I will wait for the results at home. Even if we have different points of view, religious or political, we need to live in symbiosis,” Tekay said.

Back in Uskudar, Yuksel’s wife Ebru echoed the wish for a orderly political process. “There will be no winners or losers in this election. Whoever comes, we want peace,” she said.

© Agence France-Presse

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