Erdogan wants Istanbul vote annulled over alleged irregularities

AFP  |  Ankara 

Turkish Recep Erdogan called for authorities to cancel last week's over alleged irregularities, reported Wednesday.

Erdogan's ruling was dealt an upset on March 31 when the party lost the capital to the opposition as well as Istanbul, the country's largest city.

The AKP's candidate, Erdogan loyalist and former Binali Yildirim, lost by nearly 30,000 votes to the main opposition CHP's Ekrem Imamoglu, according to early counts.

The gap narrowed after the AKP had nulled votes counted again. The party on Tuesday said it would ask election authorities for a re-run of the race.

Pointing to irregularities involving ballot box chiefs, Erdogan said if officials "had a sincere attitude, this would lead to cancellation", Hurriyet daily reported.

He told Turkish journalists that there were individuals from different professions including the military rather than civil servants serving as ballot box chiefs.

"Our colleagues have confirmed this. Of course all this casts doubt," he said after a visit to on Monday where he held talks with Russian

Both the AKP and CHP have said there is a difference of around 14,000 votes in the opposition's favour in

Erdogan on Monday said there was "theft at the ballot box" and said "organised crimes" had been carried out during the election.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 10 2019. 15:45 IST