Zürcher Nachrichten - Graft case piles pressure on Turkey's main opposition

EUR -
AED 4.322024
AFN 74.13191
ALL 96.357946
AMD 443.541895
ANG 2.105963
AOA 1079.026552
ARS 1636.211468
AUD 1.669114
AWG 2.118046
AZN 2.004059
BAM 1.954566
BBD 2.371273
BDT 143.868572
BGN 1.938772
BHD 0.44369
BIF 3490.069107
BMD 1.176692
BND 1.492439
BOB 8.135899
BRL 6.153392
BSD 1.177342
BTN 107.187971
BWP 15.627936
BYN 3.354939
BYR 23063.167397
BZD 2.367805
CAD 1.611586
CDF 2671.09151
CHF 0.912378
CLF 0.025792
CLP 1018.414995
CNY 8.129473
CNH 8.119388
COP 4357.703111
CRC 565.735668
CUC 1.176692
CUP 31.182344
CVE 110.785401
CZK 24.246916
DJF 209.121559
DKK 7.471707
DOP 72.072425
DZD 152.932389
EGP 55.96467
ERN 17.650383
ETB 180.95774
FJD 2.589667
FKP 0.869318
GBP 0.874535
GEL 3.14192
GGP 0.869318
GHS 12.94947
GIP 0.869318
GMD 86.48892
GNF 10328.43024
GTQ 9.033298
GYD 246.311376
HKD 9.195084
HNL 31.147338
HRK 7.535067
HTG 154.320618
HUF 379.303794
IDR 19896.688649
ILS 3.680817
IMP 0.869318
INR 107.165004
IQD 1542.055147
IRR 49568.159705
ISK 144.898077
JEP 0.869318
JMD 183.44498
JOD 0.834276
JPY 182.388529
KES 151.7929
KGS 102.901783
KHR 4730.30247
KMF 493.033626
KPW 1059.019513
KRW 1706.250989
KWD 0.360903
KYD 0.981068
KZT 579.786619
LAK 25210.630865
LBP 105372.788209
LKR 364.210093
LRD 217.629514
LSL 19.032945
LTL 3.474466
LVL 0.711769
LYD 7.442553
MAD 10.788504
MDL 20.15602
MGA 5122.788013
MKD 61.669224
MMK 2470.582699
MNT 4201.186743
MOP 9.476397
MRU 47.043944
MUR 54.361504
MVR 18.109317
MWK 2043.914411
MXN 20.324481
MYR 4.599449
MZN 75.20245
NAD 19.039205
NGN 1581.215422
NIO 43.322469
NOK 11.266446
NPR 171.500554
NZD 1.971654
OMR 0.452439
PAB 1.177362
PEN 3.958986
PGK 5.057807
PHP 68.342867
PKR 328.944269
PLN 4.223684
PYG 7633.181561
QAR 4.284298
RON 5.097081
RSD 117.420221
RUB 90.30887
RWF 1719.492652
SAR 4.414359
SBD 9.466704
SCR 16.698025
SDG 707.781653
SEK 10.675399
SGD 1.492763
SHP 0.882824
SLE 28.831382
SLL 24674.64662
SOS 672.479919
SRD 44.270684
STD 24355.1531
STN 24.710536
SVC 10.301497
SYP 13013.71567
SZL 19.038594
THB 36.701617
TJS 11.125635
TMT 4.13019
TND 3.365669
TOP 2.833193
TRY 51.488289
TTD 7.968868
TWD 37.189948
TZS 3047.63293
UAH 50.928451
UGX 4220.317995
USD 1.176692
UYU 45.341378
UZS 14283.983249
VES 468.614345
VND 30558.696801
VUV 139.48832
WST 3.178516
XAF 655.534838
XAG 0.01513
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.180069
XCG 2.121834
XDR 0.813892
XOF 655.543189
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.638926
ZAR 19.031167
ZMK 10591.646735
ZMW 22.116133
ZWL 378.894413
  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    17.7

    -2.26%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.91

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    -0.6100

    90.2

    -0.68%

  • CMSD

    -0.0450

    23.765

    -0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.2850

    60.895

    -0.47%

  • VOD

    -0.1550

    15.505

    -1%

  • BCC

    -1.2350

    84.365

    -1.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.1

    -0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.1650

    25.545

    -0.65%

  • BTI

    2.0250

    60.895

    +3.33%

  • RELX

    0.3750

    30.925

    +1.21%

  • RIO

    -2.6700

    96.26

    -2.77%

  • AZN

    -0.6000

    208.07

    -0.29%

  • BP

    0.4350

    38.965

    +1.12%

Graft case piles pressure on Turkey's main opposition
Graft case piles pressure on Turkey's main opposition / Photo: Adem ALTAN - AFP/File

Graft case piles pressure on Turkey's main opposition

A court hearing that could upend the leadership of Turkey's main opposition CHP is the latest bid to hobble the party behind a wave of spring protests that shook the government, analysts say.

Text size:

The hearing, which takes place on Monday at an Ankara court, could render null and void the result of a leadership primary within the Republican People's Party (CHP) in November 2023 on grounds of alleged fraud -- thereby overturning the election of leader Ozgur Ozel.

In February, the Ankara public prosecutor opened an investigation into allegations of vote buying at the congress which resulted in Ozel defeating longtime incumbent Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

The CHP has denied the allegations.

The outcome could see several CHP figures -- including jailed Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu -- facing up to three years in prison and a political ban for graft, Turkish media reported.

And if the election result is cancelled, the party leadership would almost certainly revert to 76-year-old Kilicdaroglu.

He was ousted five months after losing a bitterly fought presidential campaign against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that was widely seen as the most important vote in generations, leaving the party in crisis.

- Taming the opposition -

"This is a bid to reshape the CHP and create an opposition that is controlled by a government which is becoming more and more authoritarian," Berk Esen, a political science expert at Istanbul's Sabanci University, told AFP.

"This will provoke a split within the party, putting a weak, defeated leader in charge whom the voters don't want any more," he said.

Kilicdaroglu has already said he would be willing to take on the party leadership again if the court overturned the primary result, sparking uproar within the CHP.

"It would be out of the question to not recognise such a verdict. Would it be better if a trustee was appointed to lead the party?" he said, also voicing his disapproval of the mass protests called by the CHP following Imamoglu's arrest and jailing in March.

Widely seen as the only politician capable of defeating Erdogan at the ballot box, Imamoglu was arrested in connection with a graft and terror probe which the CHP has denounced as groundless.

He was jailed on the day that he was named CHP's candidate for the 2028 presidential race, his removal sparking Turkey's worst street unrest since 2013.

"I feel a deep sense of betrayal. I cannot stomach such remarks when so many people are in prison," Imamoglu said in response to Kilicdaroglu's remarks.

"Kilicdaroglu is a politician who will be remembered very badly. Some accuse him of working for (Erdogan's ruling) AKP but I think it's more a case of his ambition knowing no bounds," said Esen.

"He is collaborating with an authoritarian government in order to get his own power back."

Following Imamoglu's arrest, Ozel went from being a relatively low-profile leader to the face of the protests, his impassioned speeches sharpening both his own image and that of the CHP, which has since held rallies across the country and is now leading the polls.

According to a survey by Ank-Ar Research published last week, if an election were to be held now, the CHP would win 34.6 percent, more than five percentage points higher than the 29.4 percent for the AKP.

And the government is not happy.

- No more demonstrations -

"From the government's perspective, it is crucial they get the CHP off the streets because Ozel is seen as dangerous," said Eren Aksoyoglu, an expert in political communication.

"By contrast, Kilicdaroglu is making conciliatory noises to those in power, saying he no longer wants any demonstrations and that he is ready to negotiate a change to the constitution," he said.

If he were to take over the party leadership, it would "put the CHP in a position where it was negotiating with the government rather than fighting it," agreed Esen.

Observers say a more sympathetic opposition would give Erdogan much greater room for manoeuvre in the government's negotiations with the PKK after the Kurdish militants said they were ending their decades-long armed struggle.

It could also help the government push through a constitutional amendment to allow Erdogan to extend his term in office beyond 2028 -- a step that would require opposition support to be voted through.

"I don't think Kilicdaroglu would be able to hold on to the CHP leadership in the long term, but if the process (of leadership change) is drawn out over the course of a year, for example, that would let the government to change the constitution," said Esen.

And that would spell "total disaster for the opposition", he said.

In any event, Monday's hearing would likely spark "a new wave of protest, which will have economic and political consequences for the government", he added.

E.Leuenberger--NZN