Turkey: Conflicting reports on results of presidential run-off vote

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan holds an early lead over his reformist opponent, economist Kemal Kılı&ccedildaroğlu, after the polls closed across Turkey Sunday evening.
Erdogan bested Kılı&ccedildaroğlu, the candidate for the secularist Republican People’s Party (CHP), in the first vote on May 14th, but narrowly failed to clear the 50% threshold needed to win outright, sending the country into a second round of voting.
Running at the helm of the right-wing Justice and Development Party, Erdogan received 49.5% of the vote in the first round, compared to 44.89% for Kılı&ccedildaroğlu.
Last week, nationalist third-party candidate Sinan Ogan, who received 5.17% of the vote in the first round, endorsed Erdogan.
With polling places closed and 83.6% of the “ballot boxes opened”, Erdogan currently leads Kılı&ccedildaroğlu by 6.8 points, 53.4% to 46.6%, according to the state-run Anadolu Agency.
However, the Opposition-affiliated ANKA outlet reported that with 88.8% of the ballot boxes opened, the election is a virtual dead heat, with 50.06% for the incumbent and 49.94 for the challenger.
CHP party spokesperson Faik Oztrak made a public statement Sunday evening responding to Anadolu”s reports regarding the vote count.
“We”ve seen in the past how the results were manipulated by state owned Anadolu Agency, that”s why you shouldn”t leave the ballot boxes,” he said, according to The Guardian.
“As of now, we seem to have received the votes of one out of every two people.”

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