Erdogan
vows purge of
'enemies' after vote win
The
leader of Turkey’s ruling AKP party, which won Sunday’s local
elections, is threatening to settle scores with political opponents
who tried to topple him by publishing damaging leaks. “They will
pay the price,” PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.
RT,
31
March, 2013
Speaking
in the wee hours on Monday morning from a balcony at AKP headquarters
in Ankara to a rally of thousands of supporters, Turkey’s Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan thanked his followers and called for
further actions against opposition.
With
nearly all of the ballots counted, Erdogan’s Justice and
Development Party (AKP) is leading with 45 percent of the votes,
while the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) led by
moderate US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen has gained about 28.5
percent.
For
Tayyip Erdogan, 60, these municipal polls became a referendum on his
11-year leadership and a rehearsal for a presidential election in
August he is set to participate in.
The
results of the elections delivered an “Ottoman
slap” to
his opponents, Erdogan said, comparing rivals to medieval assassins
and labeling them as “terrorists” and
an “alliance
of evil.”
“You
have protected the independence struggle of the new Turkey,” PM
told his supporters, stressing that from now on, “There
won’t be a state within a state. We will root them out.”
The
last several months of the election campaign in Turkey have been
marked with fierce street clashes between Erdogan’s Islamists
conservative supporters and a secular political camp, leaving Turkish
society extremely polarized on political issues.
Turkish
security officials reported that at least eight people died on the
day of the elections as fights between rival candidates broke out.
Supporters of the ruling AK Party wave
Turkish flags as they wait for the arrival of Turkish Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogan at the party's headquarters in Ankara March 30, 2014.
(Reuters/Umit Bektas)
A series of internet leaks targeting Erdogan, his family and closest allies brought Turkish society to a boiling point. Tape recordings of phone calls purportedly by PM Erdogan led to a huge corruption scandal.
Erdogan
has no doubt that it is Gulen who was behind the damaging
Twitter leaks,
the explosive audio recording on YouTube and exposure of secret
security talks on Syria.
“How
can you threaten our national security on Syria? Syria is currently
in a state of war against us,”Erdogan
said.
The
followers of the opposition 73-year-old imam Fethullah Gulen in law
enforcement and judiciary conducted last December a number of
anti-graft raids targeting businessmen close to Erdogan and sons of
ministers in his cabinet.
But
Erdogan recovered fast and lashed out at Gulen, accusing his rival of
creating parallel power structures with the help of his supporters in
law enforcement.
Thousands
of police officers, hundreds of judges and prosecutors were purged
since December, but Erdogan is firmly set to finalize the clean-up in
the power structures.
“We
will enter their lair and… they will pay the price,” announced
Erdogan during his speech in Ankara.
“It's
already clear from his speech this evening that he's basically
threatening society,” Gursel
Tekin, vice president of the opposition CHP party, told Reuters.
Erdogan
is known for tough actions against his political opponents. He never
hesitated to disperse with casualties protests in Istanbul,
completely block Twitter and YouTube services in the country because
the opposition actively use it and more – all that without
listening warnings from the NATO allies.
Despite the serious corruption allegations, the voters supported Erdogan “to keep the status they have acquired under his rule,” Mehmet Akif Okur of Ankara’s Gazi University told AFP, adding: “Voters believe that if Erdogan falls, they will fall with him.”
With
such support at the ballot box, “Erdogan
will be more ambitious in pushing through tougher policies,”predicted
Okur. “I
would expect lawsuits against the Gulen movement and arrests in the
coming days,”he
said.
And
the harsh tone taken by the Turkish PM in Ankara indicates a strong
action against the opponents is on its way. "From
tomorrow, there may be some who flee," Erdogan
said last night.
“Let
me tell you, Erdogan's response is coming,” Can
Paker, head of the pro-Erdogan Tesev think-tank, told Reuters.
“He
will harshly and fully clean up the police and judiciary. And he will
purge the press that supported the leaks. He will most certainly do
that. He will say 'I was elected to eliminate them,' he is not going
to soften,” Paker
said.
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