Voting Irregularities in Turkey

Saithan

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My Danish friend who is married to a Bulgar Turk lived in Istanbul and had home office a few years ago. And I remember that they got voting papers for people that did not live in their apartment (syrian names), at the time his wife was working for a news station, and she was really angry.

I kept wondering how the fuck can such things occur in Turkey. It can only occur if political parties or people supporting these parties allow such things to happen.

I do not think political parties are interested in rooting out this occurance because if they did they would cooperate 100%.


Political parties in Turkey are crying foul after thousands of unlikely voters appeared on the electoral roll.
Among the oddities are many first-time voters over 100 years old - and one aged 165.

Opposition parties also said they had discovered more than 1,000 voters registered at a single apartment.

The discovery comes ahead of local elections in March, in which President Erdogan's AK Party may face its toughest political challenge in years.

Turkey has faced economic stagnation in recent months, and the value of its currency is significantly lower than it was a year ago. That has led to speculation that the dominant AKP could lose several key cities, including the capital, Ankara.

Opposition parties now say that voter lists are being manipulated.
The Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) allege that the unusual voter records they have found are mostly areas where AKP lost by a small number of votes in previous elections.

CHP says there are more than 6,000 registered voters over 100 years old, many of which are supposedly older than the oldest documented living person, currently 116.
It includes 165-year-old Ayse Ekici, allegedly born in 1854, at the time of the Ottoman empire, and registered to vote for the first time his year, CHP said.

Another voter, known only as Zulfu, is supposedly 149. There is also Ayse, said to be 148 years old.
A portrait of Sultan Abdülmecid I, in regal clothing
IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES

image captionThe supposed voter Ayse Ekici would have been born under the reign of Sultan Abdulmecid of the Ottoman Empire

There are also widespread examples of suspiciously large numbers of people registered at a single address, opposition parties say.

In addition to the 1,000 people reported registered at a single apartment, there are many apparently registered at buildings that are empty, or at construction sites, or on the fifth floor of a four-storey building in one case in Istanbul.
There are also surprisingly large shifts in voter numbers - one district in Cankiri saw its registered voters grow by 95% in six months.

Opposition parties have asked the country's electoral board to investigate the discoveries.

On Monday, Hasan Seymen of the Iyi party tweeted that tens of thousands of voters had been taken off the roll following complaints from the opposition.

But one official from the AK Party said the supposed electoral irregularities were in fact designed to hurt the ruling party, not help it, and that the party had filed objections itself.

"The opposition parties are trying to create the perception that we are organising this," party member and election official Recep Ozel told Reuters. "We are the biggest victims here."

His counterpart for the CHP, Hadimi Yakupoglu, told Deutsche Welle that faked registrations were an attempt to manipulate the elections.

"The mayors and parties are to blame," he said, alleging that mayors had registered other towns' residents. "Mayor is an attractive role, so they try to get as many voters as possible."

"It has never been this bad," he said.
 

Anmdt

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My Danish friend who is married to a Bulgar Turk lived in Istanbul and had home office a few years ago. And I remember that they got voting papers for people that did not live in their apartment (syrian names), at the time his wife was working for a news station, and she was really angry.

I kept wondering how the fuck can such things occur in Turkey. It can only occur if political parties or people supporting these parties allow such things to happen.

I do not think political parties are interested in rooting out this occurance because if they did they would cooperate 100%.


Political parties in Turkey are crying foul after thousands of unlikely voters appeared on the electoral roll.
Among the oddities are many first-time voters over 100 years old - and one aged 165.

Opposition parties also said they had discovered more than 1,000 voters registered at a single apartment.

The discovery comes ahead of local elections in March, in which President Erdogan's AK Party may face its toughest political challenge in years.

Turkey has faced economic stagnation in recent months, and the value of its currency is significantly lower than it was a year ago. That has led to speculation that the dominant AKP could lose several key cities, including the capital, Ankara.

Opposition parties now say that voter lists are being manipulated.
The Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) allege that the unusual voter records they have found are mostly areas where AKP lost by a small number of votes in previous elections.

CHP says there are more than 6,000 registered voters over 100 years old, many of which are supposedly older than the oldest documented living person, currently 116.
It includes 165-year-old Ayse Ekici, allegedly born in 1854, at the time of the Ottoman empire, and registered to vote for the first time his year, CHP said.

Another voter, known only as Zulfu, is supposedly 149. There is also Ayse, said to be 148 years old.
A portrait of Sultan Abdülmecid I, in regal clothing
IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES

image captionThe supposed voter Ayse Ekici would have been born under the reign of Sultan Abdulmecid of the Ottoman Empire

There are also widespread examples of suspiciously large numbers of people registered at a single address, opposition parties say.

In addition to the 1,000 people reported registered at a single apartment, there are many apparently registered at buildings that are empty, or at construction sites, or on the fifth floor of a four-storey building in one case in Istanbul.
There are also surprisingly large shifts in voter numbers - one district in Cankiri saw its registered voters grow by 95% in six months.

Opposition parties have asked the country's electoral board to investigate the discoveries.

On Monday, Hasan Seymen of the Iyi party tweeted that tens of thousands of voters had been taken off the roll following complaints from the opposition.

But one official from the AK Party said the supposed electoral irregularities were in fact designed to hurt the ruling party, not help it, and that the party had filed objections itself.

"The opposition parties are trying to create the perception that we are organising this," party member and election official Recep Ozel told Reuters. "We are the biggest victims here."

His counterpart for the CHP, Hadimi Yakupoglu, told Deutsche Welle that faked registrations were an attempt to manipulate the elections.

"The mayors and parties are to blame," he said, alleging that mayors had registered other towns' residents. "Mayor is an attractive role, so they try to get as many voters as possible."

"It has never been this bad," he said.
Let me add some legal or illegal irreqularities:

Bulk voting in eastern provinces:
A person from greater family comes to vote, votes for all. Sometimes it is a village, sometimes collection of villages where the tribe resides in, the dead people are not declared to the government in time and their votes are submitted for several years too.

Mentally ill people can vote with their relatives coming into the booth:
As a citizen they have right to vote regardless of their condition but voting also requires the voter to hold freewill, i have personally seen a mother bringing her 2 mentally ill sons, which were definitely beyond of %95 disabled so they can't even communicate with the people who is in charge of the process, she votes for herself then individually goes in with both of her sons and votes for them too.

Double votes:
In earlier times the finger was inked to show that person has voted, AKP has stopped this application and multiple votes has been around in social media, leaked by the people who has voted in such way. They simply goes in with different/fake id's and vote on behalf of ghost people.
 

Indos

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My Danish friend who is married to a Bulgar Turk lived in Istanbul and had home office a few years ago. And I remember that they got voting papers for people that did not live in their apartment (syrian names), at the time his wife was working for a news station, and she was really angry.

I kept wondering how the fuck can such things occur in Turkey. It can only occur if political parties or people supporting these parties allow such things to happen.

I do not think political parties are interested in rooting out this occurance because if they did they would cooperate 100%.


Political parties in Turkey are crying foul after thousands of unlikely voters appeared on the electoral roll.
Among the oddities are many first-time voters over 100 years old - and one aged 165.

Opposition parties also said they had discovered more than 1,000 voters registered at a single apartment.

The discovery comes ahead of local elections in March, in which President Erdogan's AK Party may face its toughest political challenge in years.

Turkey has faced economic stagnation in recent months, and the value of its currency is significantly lower than it was a year ago. That has led to speculation that the dominant AKP could lose several key cities, including the capital, Ankara.

Opposition parties now say that voter lists are being manipulated.
The Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) allege that the unusual voter records they have found are mostly areas where AKP lost by a small number of votes in previous elections.

CHP says there are more than 6,000 registered voters over 100 years old, many of which are supposedly older than the oldest documented living person, currently 116.
It includes 165-year-old Ayse Ekici, allegedly born in 1854, at the time of the Ottoman empire, and registered to vote for the first time his year, CHP said.

Another voter, known only as Zulfu, is supposedly 149. There is also Ayse, said to be 148 years old.
A portrait of Sultan Abdülmecid I, in regal clothing
IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES

image captionThe supposed voter Ayse Ekici would have been born under the reign of Sultan Abdulmecid of the Ottoman Empire

There are also widespread examples of suspiciously large numbers of people registered at a single address, opposition parties say.

In addition to the 1,000 people reported registered at a single apartment, there are many apparently registered at buildings that are empty, or at construction sites, or on the fifth floor of a four-storey building in one case in Istanbul.
There are also surprisingly large shifts in voter numbers - one district in Cankiri saw its registered voters grow by 95% in six months.

Opposition parties have asked the country's electoral board to investigate the discoveries.

On Monday, Hasan Seymen of the Iyi party tweeted that tens of thousands of voters had been taken off the roll following complaints from the opposition.

But one official from the AK Party said the supposed electoral irregularities were in fact designed to hurt the ruling party, not help it, and that the party had filed objections itself.

"The opposition parties are trying to create the perception that we are organising this," party member and election official Recep Ozel told Reuters. "We are the biggest victims here."

His counterpart for the CHP, Hadimi Yakupoglu, told Deutsche Welle that faked registrations were an attempt to manipulate the elections.

"The mayors and parties are to blame," he said, alleging that mayors had registered other towns' residents. "Mayor is an attractive role, so they try to get as many voters as possible."

"It has never been this bad," he said.

Do you have quick counts result in every election conducted by many survey companies ??
 

Anmdt

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Do you have quick counts result in every election conducted by many survey companies ??
unofficial results are usually declared by midnight of the election day in here, or in the next morning unless there are requests of recounting.
news agencies, political parties and some independent movements has their representatives on the ballots, they deliver quick results and later merges the missing ones from each other.
the last istanbul election (repeated one) was finalized in 3-4 hours unofficially.
 

Saithan

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I think it's necessary for Turkey to have Gendarmerie go out and make headcounts...

I do not see any other way of curbing with the fake 100+ year old ppl voting.

Either that, or have people show up and sign up/register for voting in person.
 

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