Turkey's predominantly Kurdish regions backed presidency, claims Erdoğan aide

Presidential spokesman İbrahim Kalın says referendum "yes" votes in Kurdish southeast outstripped usual ruling AKP party voting
Wednesday, 19 April 2017 21:47

Turkey's presidential constitution changes were unexpectedly supported in the regions with Kurdish majority at the recent referendum, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's spokesman İbrahim Kalın said Wednesday.

"Another important development was that the 'yes' campaign received more support in predominantly Kurdish parts of Turkey than originally anticipated," Kalın wrote in his article for the Daily Sabah newspaper.

Kalın wrote, citing results, that the constitutional changes were supported by 50.8 percent of voters in the province of Muş, although the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) had only 24.8 percent there in the 2015 parliamentary elections.

“In Diyarbakır, Siirt, Van and Mardin, a similar change could be observed," the spokesman wrote.

“By making a very clear distinction between the Kurds and the PKK, President Erdoğan and the government have won the Kurdish confidence again,” he said.

Turkish voters went to polling stations on Sunday to either support or reject government-backed constitutional changes that would convert the country's governance system into a presidential republic and therefore increase presidential powers. The fraudulent referendum results showed that the amendments to the constitution were approved by 51.41 percent of votes with all ballots counted.