728 x 90



Turkey's ousted opposition leader says preparing for possible new party

img

ISTANBUL, July 15 (Reuters) - Turkey's ousted main opposition CHP leader said on Wednesday that preparations are under way for the possible ​establishment of a new political party, but any formal ‌step would wait until after ongoing legal proceedings.


In May, a Turkish court annulled the Republican People's Party's (CHP) 2023 congress that elected Ozgur Ozel ​as chairman, citing irregularities. It reinstated as chairman Kemal ​Kilicdaroglu, the CHP's former leader who lost to President ⁠Tayyip Erdogan in the 2023 presidential election.

Ozel said the ​legal proceedings on an appeal to the ruling that ousted ​his leadership and a request to hold an extraordinary party congress could be completed within a couple of weeks, and if they are ​blocked, a new party could then be set up.
"A formal ​step could be taken towards the end of July or the beginning ‌of ⁠August," Ozel said in an interview with Sozcu TV, when asked about the timing of the establishment of the new party.


The court's decision, described by critics as politically motivated amid ​an unprecedented legal ​crackdown on the ⁠CHP, rattled financial markets and fuelled concerns about democracy and the rule of law in ​Turkey. The government denies such assertions, saying ​the judiciary ⁠is independent.

The opposition's crisis could boost Erdogan's prospects of extending his more than two-decade rule of NATO-member Turkey in an election ⁠scheduled to ​be held by 2028, but which ​analysts say could come earlier if the government seeks to take advantage of ​the CHP strife.