Erdogan backs former environment chief to win back Istanbul

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan announces Murat Kurum as his ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) candidate in Istanbul's mayoral election in March, in Istanbul, Turkey January 7, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 07 January 2024
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Erdogan backs former environment chief to win back Istanbul

  • Kurum graduated from Konya’s Selcuk University with a degree in civil engineering and served as Erdogan’s environment and urbanization minister from 2018 until last year

ISTANBUL: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has entrusted a former environment minister to run for mayor of Istanbul and avenge the worst political defeat of the Turkish leader’s two-decade rule.
Murat Kurum will represent Erdogan’s Islamic conservative Justice and Development Party or AKP in March 31 municipal elections in which control of Turkiye’s main cities will be up for grabs.
The secular opposition Republican People’s Party or CHP seized back control of Istanbul for the first time since Erdogan ruled the city as mayor in the 1990s in the watershed 2019 polls.
That vote also saw the opposition win back the capital, Ankara, and keep power in the Aegean port city of Izmir.
The opposition’s control of Turkiye’s three main cities shattered Erdogan’s image of political invincibility and underscored the resentment rising against his dominant rule.

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Murat Kurum will represent President Erdogan’s AKP in March 31 municipal elections in which control of Turkiye’s main cities will be up for grabs.

The president’s rivals campaigned against perceived corruption and a sweeping political crackdown that followed a failed 2016 coup attempt.
During an economic crisis in which the annual inflation rate topped 85 percent, Erdogan bounced back last year to win a tough reelection.
He has since set his sights on winning back Istanbul — the city where he grew up playing street football and where he launched his political career as a self-proclaimed champion of Turkiye’s pious Muslims and the poor.
“We say no stopping until March 31, keep going,” Erdogan told cheering supporters during a party congress in Istanbul.
“We stand before our nation with candidates who run for solutions rather than excuses, who act with humility rather than arrogance,” he said.
Kurum graduated from Konya’s Selcuk University with a degree in civil engineering and served as Erdogan’s environment and urbanization minister from 2018 until last year.
Turkish media reported that the 47-year-old Ankara native came out on top of an internal party poll Erdogan oversaw last month.
Kurum also worked in Turkiye’s housing development administration and became a member of parliament representing one of Istanbul’s districts last year.
His wife, Sengul, has held a senior position at Turkiye’s powerful RTUK media regulator since 2021.
Kurum’s background as an urban planner fits with Erdogan’s claims that Istanbul has become run down and dysfunctional under the control of the opposition.
Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu edged out Erdogan’s ally in a 2019 election that gained international headlines for being controversially annulled.
Imamoglu won a re-run vote by a massive margin, turning him into an instant hero for the opposition and a formidable foe for Erdogan.
The 52-year-old is widely seen as the opposition’s best bet at winning back the presidency from Erdogan’s AKP in 2028.
He was effectively barred from running for president last year because of a politically charged defamation conviction that his supporters viewed as Erdogan’s vendetta for losing in 2019.
But he has challenged the ruling and repeatedly said he would like to run for president one day.
A defeat for Imamoglu in March could sink his political ambitions and leave the opposition with no clear presidential candidate to run in 2028.
After confirming his candidacy, Kurum appeared to take a potshot at Imamoglu’s national aspirations in a social media message.
“We are here to manage Istanbul in a systematic and planned manner and to give the city the special attention it deserves,” Kurum said.

 


Top Hamas leader rejects disarmament or ‘foreign rule’

Updated 7 sec ago
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Top Hamas leader rejects disarmament or ‘foreign rule’

  • “As long as there is occupation, there is resistance. Resistance is a right of peoples under occupation” said Meshal

DOHA: A senior Hamas leader said Sunday that the Palestinian Islamist movement would not surrender its weapons nor accept foreign intervention in Gaza, pushing back against US and Israeli demands.
“Criminalizing the resistance, its weapons, and those who carried it out is something we should not accept,” Khaled Meshal said at a conference in Doha.
“As long as there is occupation, there is resistance. Resistance is a right of peoples under occupation ... something nations take pride in,” said Meshal, who previously headed the group.
Hamas, an Islamist movement, has waged an armed struggle against what it sees as Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories. It launched a deadly cross-border raid into Israel from Gaza on October 7, 2023, which triggered the latest war.
A US-brokered ceasefire in Gaza is in its second phase, which foresees that demilitarization of the territory — including the disarmament of Hamas — along with a gradual withdrawal of Israeli forces.
Hamas has repeatedly said that disarmament is a red line, although it has indicated it could consider handing over its weapons to a future Palestinian governing authority.
Israeli officials say that Hamas still has around 20,000 fighters and about 60,000 Kalashnikovs in Gaza.
A Palestinian technocratic committee has been set up with a goal of taking over the day-to-day governance in the battered Gaza Strip, but it remains unclear whether, or how, it will address the issue of demilitarization.
The committee operates under the so-called “Board of Peace,” an initiative launched by US President Donald Trump.
Originally conceived to oversee the Gaza truce and post-war reconstruction, the board’s mandate has since expanded, prompting concerns among critics that it could evolve into a rival to the United Nations.
Trump unveiled the board at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos last month, where leaders and officials from nearly two dozen countries joined him in signing its founding charter.
Alongside the Board of Peace, Trump also created a Gaza Executive Board — an advisory panel to the Palestinian technocratic committee — comprising international figures including US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, as well as former British prime minister Tony Blair.
On Sunday, Meshal urged the Board of Peace to adopt what he called a “balanced approach” that would allow for Gaza’s reconstruction and the flow of aid to its roughly 2.2 million residents, while warning that Hamas would “not accept foreign rule” over Palestinian territory.
“We adhere to our national principles and reject the logic of guardianship, external intervention, or the return of a mandate in any form,” Meshal said.
“Palestinians are to govern Palestinians. Gaza belongs to the people of Gaza and to Palestine. We will not accept foreign rule,” he added.