urkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan claimed a narrow victory in Sunday’s referendum on whether to give him sweeping new powers, but Turkey’s opposition said they would contest the result over fears of voter fraud. Mr Erdoğan’s Yes camp had won around 51 per cent while the No campaign took 49 per cent with 98 per cent of the vote counted, according to The Telegraph and its article Erdogan claims victory in Turkish referendum but result swiftly challenged by opposition. But the opposition CHP party said it was looking to contest 37 per cent of the ballot boxes over suspicion of vote tampering. The CHP’s protest was based on a last-minute decision by the High Electoral Board to accept ballots that had not been officially stamped.
Turkish ballots are usually stamped before they are handed to voters but the board announced at the last minute it would accept unstamped ballots unless they could be proven to be fraudulent. "The High Electoral Board has failed by allowing fraud in the referendum," CHP deputy chairman Bulent Tezcan said at the party's headquarters in Ankara.
Mr Erdoğan claimed victory in a low-key speech in Istanbul in which he appealed for unity. “This is a historic decision, not an ordinary event,” he said. “We are carrying out the most important reform in the history of our nation.” Mr Erdoğan said he would immediately begin looking at restoring the death penalty, a move that would end any possibility of Turkey joining the EU.
The Yes vote gives Turkey's government the authority to scrap the country's century-old parliamentary system and replace it with a presidential model. Opponents have warned the new system will send Turkey lurching towards dictatorship as it would concentrate unchecked power in the hands of Mr Erdoğan, who has jailed opponents and cracked down on dissent since a failed coup against him last year. The new constitutional system will get rid of the role of prime minister and transform the presidency from a largely ceremonial position into a vastly powerful post as both head of state and head of the government. The president will be able to appoint senior judges, declare a state of emergency, dissolve parliament and in some cases issue new laws by decree. It will also theoretically allow Mr Erdoğan, who has dominated Turkish politics as president and prime minister since 2003, to stay in office until 2029.
Most of the changes will not come into effect until after Turkey’s next presidential election in 2019 but Mr Erdoğan’s towering position in Turkish politics makes it unlikely that anyone will be able to challenge him.
Turnout was high in Sunday’s election with more 86 per cent of the country’s 55 million eligible voters casting ballots that were simply marked Yes or No.
Several hundred young people took to the streets in Kadikoy, one of Istanbul's most liberal neighbourhoods, to protest the results. "Erdoğan, the thief. Erdoğan, the murderer," they chanted.
Yakup Yeldiz, a 21-year-old student, said: "The future is dark now. We hoped democracy would find its way, but it won't. There's no democracy now. I feel like laughing but I'm really crying.
At a secondary school in the Kosuyolu neighbourhood of Istanbul, voters mostly stuck to familiar scripts after they cast their ballots: Yes voters said they had faith in Mr Erdoğan while No voters said they feared too much power would be given to one man.
But others offered surprising reasons for their vote. Insaf Akay, a 37-year-old mother in a headscarf, said she was tired of being discriminated against by secular Turks, describing how she had been spat on in a market. “I think there will be more freedom for people like me under the new system,” she said.
Mustafa Sacat, 62, said he normally voted for Mr Erdoğan and his AKP party but did not want to give up on the parliamentary system that has governed Turkey since 1920. “I like Erdogan but I want to keep the Parliament system.”