16.4 C
London
Saturday, May 18, 2024
HomeWorldErdogan's rival adopts a more aggressive stance, pursuing Turkish nationalists.

Erdogan’s rival adopts a more aggressive stance, pursuing Turkish nationalists.

Turkey’s opposition leader vowed on Thursday to return millions of migrants in a strident message designed to earn the support of an ultra-nationalist who helped force a runoff in the weekend’s presidential election.

Sunday was the first time secular opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu addressed the public since a historic election in which he finished nearly five points behind President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Kilicdaroglu delivered the opposition’s finest performance during the Turkish leader’s two-decade rule.

Erdogan's rival adopts a more aggressive stance, pursuing turkish nationalists.
Erdogan's rival adopts a more aggressive stance, pursuing turkish nationalists.

However, it fell short of pre-election polling expectations and left the opposition visibly despondent.

Since then, the 74-year-old has reorganized his campaign team and toughened his message to win over Turkey’s right-wing electors in the runoff election on May 28. In addition, he intends to meet Sinan Ogan, a far-right figure who received 5.2% of the vote and is still considering his endorsement.

Kilicdaroglu attempted on Thursday to significantly toughen his message compared to the more inclusive tone he adopted at the beginning of the campaign.

The former civil servant said, “Erdogan, you failed to protect the country’s borders and honor.”

“You have brought more than 10 million refugees to this nation on purpose… As soon as I assume authority, I will send all refugees back home.”

Ogan has stated that he will only support a candidate who cracks down on migrants and combats “terrorism” — a code term for Kurdish militants in Turkey.

“Syrians are our siblings”

Erdogan and his Islamic-rooted party were lauded by vast swaths of the Muslim world for their more tolerant posture towards refugees fleeing conflicts in Syria and other countries.

In the past decade, Turkey’s refugee and migrant population of five million became the largest in the globe.

A separate agreement between Ankara and the European Union in 2016 permitted migrants attempting to reach Western Europe to settle in Turkey, thereby mitigating the continent’s migration crisis.

Brussels awarded billions of euros in financing to Turkey for the program. Anti-immigrant sentiment soared, however, as a result of an economic crisis that accelerated as the election drew closer.

The Erdogan administration has attempted to find a compromise.

Thursday, Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu stated that Turkey had already repatriated over 500,000 Syrians.

We will not turn Turkey into a warehouse for refugees, and we have not done so to date. “However, the Syrians are our brothers,” said Soylu.

“We cannot condemn them to death. We have not, however. Erdogan does not wish to be remembered as the leader who caused the fatalities of Syrians.

Read More

RELATED ARTICLES

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most Popular

Nagelsmann ignores Hummels, opts for regulars at Euro 2024

Nagelsmann disregards Hummels and stays with the Euro regulars. Germany national football coach Julian Nagelsmann ignored the late claims of Borussia Dortmund's Mats Hummels and Julian Brandt when he named a nearly unchanged squad for the 2024 Euros. Dortmund advanced to the Champions League final, where they will face Real Madrid, thanks to the contributions of 2014 World Cup champion Hummels and midfielder Brandt. However, Dortmund manager Jurgen Nagelsmann stated on Thursday that he preferred to stay with the squad that defeated France and the Netherlands in March.

The eight indicators of identity hacker and how to prevent it

Identity theft reports are rising in the US; by 2023, over 15 million people will have reported identity theft. In a time when hackers can easily penetrate your phone's security and obtain your passwords, there are eight subtle indicators that can help you thwart cybercriminals and protect your identity. Experts claim that most identity theft protection services are ineffective because they don't notify you when your finances, accounts, or credit score are at risk.

US tariffs on Chinese imports benefit whom? The experts weigh in

This week, the United States and China fired their latest salvo in the ongoing trade war, a move that coincides with a heated campaign for the White House. On Tuesday, US President Joe Biden announced $18 billion in tariff increases on imports of various Chinese products. Lithium-ion batteries comprise $13 billion of the overall imports, with medical gloves and syringes, in addition to specific steel and aluminum products, accounting for the remaining $5 billion.

The president-elect pleads for unity as Robert Fico recovers from the shooting

According to officials, Slovakian prime minister Robert Fico is in a stable condition but is "not yet out of the woods." The country's president-elect pleaded for unity after a shooting exposed the country's profound political divisions in recent months. The shooting, which marked the first significant attempt at assassinating a political leader in Europe in over two decades, caused widespread concern throughout the continent. Leaders attributed the violence to a progressively tense and polarized political atmosphere in European nations preceding the June elections for the European Parliament.

Recent Comments