ISTANBUL: Turkey’s justice minister slammed the main opposition party on Saturday for contesting the outcome of Sunday’s referendum on expanding presidential powers and said there is no judicial path to reverse the ruling.
In a series of tweets, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said all decisions on electoral issues, including complaints and fraud allegations, are in the purview of Turkey’s electoral board.
“Applications against the High Electoral Board’s decisions cannot be taken to any court or authority, including the Council of State and the Constitutional Court,” he tweeted. Bozdag said these judicial organs would reject such applications based on Turkish laws.
Bozdag’s comments follow an application by the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) to the Council of State on Friday, seeking to overturn the electoral board’s decision that unstamped ballot papers were valid.
International monitors said the electoral board’s decision removed an important safeguard against fraud and was “contrary to law.” The board, however, published past rulings on the validity of unstamped ballots.
The controversy on unstamped ballots formed the basis of applications by the CHP and two other opposition parties to annul the referendum, which the electoral board rejected Wednesday with a 10-1 vote.
CHP officials said they would contest the decision at the Constitutional Court and if necessary, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).
The minister said the CHP was showing contempt for the people’s will and tweeted, “No court can undo/change the decisions of the nation.”
Unofficial results show Erdogan’s “yes” campaign garnered 51.4 percent of the vote.
Turkey’s minister slams opposition for contesting referendum result
Turkey’s minister slams opposition for contesting referendum result
Famine spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s Darfur: UN-backed experts
- Famine is spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s North Darfur after the paramilitary takeover of state capital El-Fasher
PORT SUDAN: Famine is spreading to two more areas of Sudan’s North Darfur after the paramilitary takeover of state capital El-Fasher triggered mass displacement into surrounding communities, UN-backed experts said on Thursday.
In an alert issued by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), global food security experts warned that “famine thresholds for acute malnutrition have now been surpassed” in the areas of Um Baru and Kernoi, near the border with Chad.
They added that the spread of famine came as the fall of El-Fasher led to “massive displacement of residents and displaced persons into surrounding areas of North Darfur.”
In an alert issued by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), global food security experts warned that “famine thresholds for acute malnutrition have now been surpassed” in the areas of Um Baru and Kernoi, near the border with Chad.
They added that the spread of famine came as the fall of El-Fasher led to “massive displacement of residents and displaced persons into surrounding areas of North Darfur.”
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