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Opposition Warns Of 'Worst Case Scenario' If Erdogan Wins

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  • Opposition Warns Of 'Worst Case Scenario' If Erdogan Wins

    Al-Monitor
    Aug 7 2014

    OPPOSITION WARNS OF 'WORST CASE SCENARIO' IF ERDOGAN WINS

    Author: Tulin Daloglu
    Posted August 7, 2014

    Turkey's Nationalist Action Party (MHP) and the People's Democracy
    Party (HDP) are at the two opposite ends of the political spectrum in
    this country. The former represents Turkish ultranationalism, while
    the latter stands for Kurdish nationalism. They blame each other for
    threatening the territorial integrity and the unity of this nation.

    Yet, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's divisive sharp
    tongue -- even as a presidential candidate -- has created the most
    unusual bedfellows; these two opposing camps have united in their
    perception that an Erdogan presidency poses a potential risk to the
    country by sparking the fire of either a civil war or disintegration.

    Speaking at a rally in support of presidential candidate Ekmeleddin
    Ihsanoglu, MHP leader Devlet Bahceli warned Erdogan's followers that
    if the worst scenario becomes a reality, they will also have to accept
    responsibility for not changing the country's direction at the ballot
    box at a much-needed time. "If the president of this country triggers
    polarization, confrontation, forming cliques, if the president of this
    country continues this strategy of tension triggering an ethnic based
    division and sectarian segregation, and therefore aims to divide the
    country as a whole, we will have to bear the result of this," Bahceli
    said on Aug. 5 in the Black Sea city of Karabuk. "This responsibility
    will weigh on the shoulders of all those voting for the AKP [the ruling
    Justice and Development Party]." Bahceli also stressed that until
    Erdogan clears himself from the country's biggest ever corruption
    and bribery scandal, people should not vote him into the country's
    highest office. "Anger in the country is growing. May God forbid it,
    but if this tension turns into fighting neither the AKP nor other
    politicians will survive it."

    Selahattin Demirtas, HDP's presidential candidate, agreed with
    Bahceli on this note. "Our sects and ethnicities are not a matter
    to be ashamed of. If this is the way God created us, this is how we
    will live. No one has the right to question, or to make others boo us
    because of this. If this state goes on with this mindset, we won't get
    only divided into two pieces, but into 50 pieces at the very least,
    and those people speaking with that narrative will be responsible for
    this end result," he said on Aug. 5 in Van, a city in eastern Turkey.

    On the same day, Erdogan said once again that it was the most
    demeaning thing for him when rumors spread that his family has Armenian
    antecedents. "How come this [presidential office] can not be occupied
    by a Kurd, Turk, Laz, Armenian, but only by themselves! How come they
    see this kind of a prerogative for themselves? This perception will
    have to change. The issue is not whether we win that seat, but whoever
    wins it won't be able to peacefully occupy it. The one who wins that
    seat won't be able to point his finger at you, and order massacres,
    or deaths."

    Demirtas said of his name, "Demirtas is not only the name of a Kurd,
    but also a Turk, an Armenian and a Sunni. It is the name of those
    killed at Roboski, and Soma."

    Like Bahceli, Demirtas also stressed multiple times the threat of
    radical extremist groups such as the Islamic State (IS), which may
    aim to create chaos in Turkey due to the Erdogan government's reckless
    policy of allowing these jihadists a free passage into Syria.

    Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the main opposition Republican People's Party
    (CHP) leader, also concurs with both Bahceli and Demirtas. Stressing
    that Turkey's 49 Mosul consulate staff have been hostage at the hands
    of IS since June 11, Kilicdaroglu said, "Have you ever heard Erdogan
    speaking about this issue? No, because he does not want to anger IS.

    It was him who supplied weapons to IS and to al-Qaeda. And now these
    weapons are being used against Turkey and its citizens." He added,
    "I call on my people: If you want war, if you want our children to
    be killed in wars in the Middle East, go and vote for Erdogan. But if
    you want peace, if you want Turkey to help the Middle East to resolve
    its problems, then vote for Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu."

    Thus, all the opposition leaders warn Turkish citizens that an Erdogan
    presidency will invite unprecedented risks and that nothing will be
    business as usual. They stress that the prime minister's divisive
    and polarizing narrative -- backed by Islamic ideology -- encourages
    radical Islamic groups to find breathing space in Turkey, which poses
    a risk for the unity of the nation. While all that may be true, the
    opposition, too, bears responsibility for not proving that they did
    all they can to defeat Erdogan at the ballot box. The only thing they
    do is to lament the threats the prime minister may pose to the country
    without investing real time and effort to rally the people behind them.

    While the AKP voters will be responsible for the potential unrest in
    the country, the opposition will certainly not be free of its mischief
    or burdens either.

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/08/daloglu-opposition-infighting-presidential-elections-chp-mhp.html#

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