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Turkey's ruling party contests Istanbul ballot results

April 1, 2019 at 9:21 pm

Scrutineers count votes after the polls for the local elections closed at a polling station in Istanbul, Turkey on 31 March, 2019 [Arif Hüdaverdi Yaman/Anadolu Agency]

The Istanbul provincial head of the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party on Monday said voting in the city during Sunday’s local ballot had seen documented irregularities that could potentially change the outcome in AK Party’s favour, reports Anadolu Agency. 

“Our [party] organization has been vigilantly reviewing all available data since last night,” Bayram Senocak told a party meeting on the European side of the city.

Senocak said party officials had come across a large number of irregularities and that these may be enough to change the outcome of elections in Turkey’s most populous province.

“After the contesting processes have been finalized, the Supreme Election Council will make the final call on results.

Whatever the outcome, we will welcome the decision of our nation,” he added.

Senocak had previously said that AK Party won the election 3,870 votes ahead of main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

He added that there are over 290,000 votes deemed invalid and that most of them were from districts where AK Party won.

READ: Turkey’s AKP and opposition party both declare victory in Istanbul

AK Party’s Istanbul candidate Binali Yildirim told reporters on Monday that invalid votes cast on Sunday outnumber the vote difference tenfold, adding that his rival Ekrem Imamoglu — the candidate of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) – currently had 25,000 more votes.

“There are 31,136 ballot boxes. If one vote is filled in incorrectly in each ballot box, this equals 31,136 votes, which is more than the difference,” Yildirim said.

Separately, deputy AK Party chairman Ali Ihsan Yavuz said 17,410 votes that should have been counted for AK Party had been registered to other parties.

“We are very confident in our information, and this information indicates that AK Party wins in Istanbul’s metropolitan municipality,” he told a party meeting in Istanbul.

Yavuz underlined that a greater number of votes had been disqualified in districts where AK Party had won, including Istanbul.

He added that “irregularities” had occurred while transferring information from the casting charts to ballot result reports.

In Sunday’s elections overall, Turkey’s ruling party is leading with 16 metropolitan municipalities (larger cities) and 24 cities claimed by AK Party candidates, according to unofficial results.

Millions of Turkish voters cast their votes nationwide on Sunday in elections to choose Turkey’s mayors, city council members, mukhtars (neighbourhood officials), and members of elder councils for the next five years.