New Istanbul mayor rallies supporters for \'new beginning\'

New Istanbul mayor rallies supporters for 'new beginning'

AFP  |  Istanbul 

Istanbul's new rallied hundreds of thousands of supporters on Sunday to celebrate a "new beginning" urging people to unite after he won a highly contested race against Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling party.

Ekrem Imamoglu, 49, of the opposition Republican (CHP), narrowly edged out his rival to capture mayor's office in a stinging setback to Erdogan's ruling AKP after a decade and a half in power.

The is still seeking a rerun of the March 31 ballot, but electoral authorities last week handed Imamoglu his mandate after he won a slim 13,000-vote lead over AKP's Binali Yildirim.

Waving Turkish flags and portraits of modern Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, thousands of Imamoglu supporters packed the vast Maltepe shoreside area on the Asian side of for the rally.

Imamoglu, a soft-spoken former district who struck a conciliatory tone throughout the heated race, has vowed to serve all citizens of the 16-million strong city, regardless of their political inclinations.

"I will work, produce solutions and achieve results. This is my promise to each and every one of the 16 million Istanbul people," he told the rally.

"Nobody will be discriminated against."

Imamoglu vowed an "accountable and transparent municipality," saying: "We will not waste a single penny."

Imamoglu, who will govern the city for the next five years, said the Maltepe rally was not a political gathering, but a way to introduce the city's new administration to the people of Istanbul.

"He is a man who can easily talk with people and never turns his back on them. He is a man of the people," said Refika, a 70-year-old woman who joined the rally. For his supporters, Erdogan remains the strong leader needs and one who speaks for religiously conservative Turks.

His critics say he has undermined rule of law with a crackdown on dissent and sowed division by portraying his opponents as enemies of the state.

Earlier on Sunday, in Ankara, CHP was attacked by a crowd during a soldier's funeral, and was taken to a nearby house by security forces for his protection, state agency said.

Video of the incident on showed a mob pushing and shoving around Kilicdaroglu as he makes his way through the crowd. His party confirmed the incident.

"Kilicdaroglu is at the right now. He is fine," a said.

The loss of Istanbul was a major blow to Turkey's Erdogan who once said winning the city was like winning -- as his party and its political predecessors ruled the city for the past 25 years.

A former of Istanbul himself, Erdogan has often boasted of the ambitious projects under his rule including a new international airport and a third bridge in Istanbul -- the country's economic hub.

has applied to the country's (YSK) for an "extraordinary" appeal to redo the election in Istanbul in the last attempt to overturn the result.

Imamoglu secured a narrow win following a recount of votes for two weeks. His lead narrowed from around 20,000 after a recount of invalid ballots in several Istanbul districts.

The AKP on Saturday presented a new petition to the YSK to cancel the Istanbul vote on the grounds that some ballot box observers were former civil servants dismissed from their public service jobs under the presidential decree, the state-run agency reported.

Erdogan met this weekend with AKP's municipal council members as well as district heads at his party's The meeting was closed to the press.

On the election trail, Imamoglu ran a low-key campaign going door to door, whereas Erdogan and his right-wing nationalist ally often held large rallies in what the said was a battle for survival.

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

First Published: Sun, April 21 2019. 20:00 IST