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Turkey parliament approves controversial changes to election laws, as fist fight erupts

Turkey parliament approves controversial changes to election laws, as fist fight erupts

The Turkish parliament has passed a controversial bill on electoral law which critics argue will favour President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling party ahead of next year's double elections.
2 min read
13 March, 2018
The controversial bill lifts a ban on electoral alliances [Getty]

The Turkish parliament on Tuesday passed a controversial bill on electoral law which critics argue will favour President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling party ahead of next year's double elections.

The 26-article bill was approved in a marathon night-long session of parliament, with ruling party and opposition lawmakers engaged in a short burst of fist fighting.

The brawl erupted in the assembly hall during the debate and continued in the parliament's lobby. A cameraman, mistaken for an opposition party aide, was attacked by nationalist deputies while filming the fighting with his mobile phone but was not seriously hurt.

The bill lifts a ban on electoral alliances, opening the door for a pact between Erdogan's Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the right-wing Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

The two parties have already announced an alliance and MHP chief Devlet Bahceli rarely voices the slightest criticism of authorities.

Such a pact would allow parties to send lawmakers to parliament even if their party remains below the required ten percent election threshold.

Parliamentary and presidential elections will take place simultaneously for the first time in November 2019.

After the polls, an executive presidency giving the head of state more powers approved in a referendum last year and decried by Erdogan's opponents takes effect.

Erdogan's government has denied rumours of snap early polls taking advantage of nationalist sentiment over its current operation in Syria, saying that the polls will be held on time.

One of the most controversial measures in the law is the validation of ballot papers that do not bear any official seal. Opponents say this will erode poll safety and encourage fraud.

Meral Danis Bestas, MP of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democracy Party (HDP), lambasted the haste in the almost 20-hour-long session in the parliament.

"Why? Because the AKP-MHP coalition has rushed this proposal which guarantees its own future and emboldens fascism."

For Bestas, the proposal is an indicator of an early election "at any time."

"Our people will not forget how you hurried to pass this proposal, which validates envelopes without a seal," secular Republican People's Party (CHP) MP Didem Engin said on Twitter, claiming that the AKP-MHP were scared of "safe elections."

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