Incumbent President Erdogan pays homage to Islamist predecessor on eve of Turkey vote

Erdogan visited Istanbul's Adnan Menderes mausoleum to pay homage to the former Turkish leader who was tried and hung one year after the military coup back in 1960.
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Erdogan told his followers back in January that he wanted to continue Menderes's fight for religious rights and nationalist causes [Getty]

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan paid homage to his executed Islamist predecessor on Saturday in a last-gasp attempt to rally his conservative base on the eve of a historic runoff election.

Erdogan's visit to Istanbul's Adnan Menderes mausoleum took him back to the man he cited when he called early polls for May 14 in a bid to ease his way to an unprecedented third decade of rule.

Menderes was tried and hanged one year after the military staged a coup in 1960 to put Turkey back on a more secular course.

Erdogan survived a putsch attempt against his own Islamic-rooted government in 2016.

"The era of coups and juntas is over," the 69-year-old declared after laying a wreath at his mentor's tomb.

"I once again call on you to go to the ballot boxes. Tomorrow is a special day for us all."

Erdogan told his followers in January that he wanted to continue Menderes's fight for religious rights and nationalist causes in the officially secular but overwhelmingly Muslim republic of 85 million people.

He paid a similarly symbolic visit to Istanbul's iconic Hagia Sophia mosque on the eve of the first round.

His conversion of the ancient seat of eastern Christianity into a mosque in 2020 cemented his hero status among poorer and more rural voters who have helped keep him in power since 2003.

Erdogan ended up beating secular opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu by nearly five percentage points two weeks ago.

But his failure to top the 50-percent threshold set up Turkey's first runoff Sunday and underscored the gradual ebbing of Erdogan's support.

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'They are afraid'

Kilicdaroglu has focused on more immediate issues as he tries to come from behind and return power to the secular party that ruled Turkey for most of the 20th century.

He used a late-night TV interview on Friday to accuse Erdogan's government of unfairly blocking his mass text messages to voters.

"They are afraid of us," the 74-year-old former civil servant said.

Observers say Turkey's votes are free of meddling on election days - but unfair because the odds are stacked against the opposition in advance.

"These were competitive but still limited elections," the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) election observer mission's chief Michael Georg Link said after the first round.

"The criminalisation of some political forces prevented full political pluralism and impeded individuals' rights to run in the elections," Link said.

Opposition supporter Zerrin Altayli said she thought Kilicdaroglu would win a fairly held vote.

"I hope the votes come out of the ballot boxes without any fraud," the 60-year-old said. "If that happens, the results will be different than in the first round."

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'Creating fake news'

Erdogan's first decade in power was distinguished by strong economic growth and warm relations with Western powers that elevated his global status and domestic support.

His second began with a corruption scandal and soon descended into a political crackdown and years of economic turmoil that erased many of the early gains.

Erdogan's consolidation of power included a near-complete monopolisation of the media by the government and its business allies.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) estimated that Erdogan received 60 times as much airtime on the TRT Haber state broadcaster as Kilicdaroglu in April.

"They have taken over all the institutions," Kilicdaroglu said in his television interview.

Erdogan used his own TV appearance Friday to attack Western coverage of the campaign.

"They are more interested in the elections in Turkey than in their own countries," Erdogan said. "But they are always creating fake news."

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Economic peril

The vote is being accompanied by growing alarm about the fate of Turkey's beleaguered lira and the stability of its banks.

Erdogan forced the central bank to follow through on his unconventional theory that lower interest rates bring down inflation.

The exact opposite has occurred.

Turkey's annual inflation rate touched 85 percent last year while the lira entered a brief freefall.

The lira has been holding remarkably steady this year - a sign the government is ploughing vast sums into market interventions to avoid politically sensitive falls.

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The central bank's net foreign currency holdings last week dropped into negative territory for the first time since 2002.

Economists feel that Erdogan's government will need to reverse course and sharply raise rates or stop supporting the lira if it wants to avoid a full-fledged crisis after the vote.

But retiree Nurdan Karac said she cared more about "continuity" than personal wealth.

"The economy might have been bad yesterday and get better tomorrow," she said.

"But what is important is our country, our people and our government."