Toppikr
  • World
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Health

Subscribe for Updates

Get the latest creative news from TOPPIKR about world, politics and business.

What's Hot

Russian minister rips Washington nuclear arms treaty ‘ultimatums,’ demands US halt ‘hostile’ policy on Moscow

04/06/2023

What is Chattanooga Known For? Get to Know Your City

04/06/2023

India train crash: Cause and people responsible have been identified, rail minister says

04/06/2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest RSS
Toppikr
Subscribe
  • World
    1. Africa
    2. Americas
    3. Asia
    4. Europe
    5. Middle East
    6. U.S.
    7. View All

    South Africa loaded arms onto sanctioned Russian vessel, US ambassador tells local media

    29/05/2023

    Ten lions killed in southern Kenya as human-wildlife conflict escalates

    29/05/2023

    US imposes election-related visa restrictions on Nigerians

    29/05/2023

    Nigeria: US convoy attacked in Anambra, killing four

    29/05/2023

    Jamie Cail death: Investigators “anxiously awaiting” autopsy and toxicology reports for former US swimmer who died in the US Virgin Islands

    01/03/2023

    Mexico election reform bill: AMLO accuses protesters of narco links

    01/03/2023

    Jamie Cail, former American swimming champion, dies in US Virgin Islands

    01/03/2023

    Peru: Mummy found in man’s food delivery bag in Peru

    01/03/2023

    India train crash: Cause and people responsible have been identified, rail minister says

    04/06/2023

    Li Shangfu: China accuses US of ‘provocation’ after near collision of warships

    04/06/2023

    Tiananmen Square masacre anniversary: vigils go global as authorities in China and Hong Kong stamp out remembrance

    04/06/2023

    Caged and cut open for bile: The fight to free Asia’s farmed bears

    04/06/2023

    Leipzig: Far-left protesters clash with police during banned demonstration in Germany

    04/06/2023

    June 3, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news

    04/06/2023

    Exclusive: Inside Ukraine’s secretive drone program

    03/06/2023

    Backlash mounts among Germany’s far-left after student jailed for attacks on neo-Nazis

    03/06/2023

    Three Israeli soldiers and an Egyptian policeman killed in rare border crossing incident

    04/06/2023

    Shirin Ebadi Fast Facts | CNN

    02/06/2023

    Black Sea urchins have disappeared from the Gulf of Aqaba. Their loss could kill off an entire coral reef

    02/06/2023

    Jordan royals marry into Saudi family with ties to MBS

    01/06/2023

    Tennessee Air National Guardsman applied to be a hitman online, the FBI says. It was a spoof website and now he’s facing charges

    19/04/2023

    Family of victim and survivors of Indianapolis FedEx mass shooting file lawsuit against gun magazine manufacturer and distributors

    19/04/2023

    Fulton County, Georgia, jail leadership resigns after inmate’s death and accusations of unsanitary conditions

    19/04/2023

    Anti-abortion doctors urge Supreme Court to keep mifepristone restrictions in place

    19/04/2023

    Russian minister rips Washington nuclear arms treaty ‘ultimatums,’ demands US halt ‘hostile’ policy on Moscow

    04/06/2023

    India train crash: Cause and people responsible have been identified, rail minister says

    04/06/2023

    Leipzig: Far-left protesters clash with police during banned demonstration in Germany

    04/06/2023

    Suez Canal traffic resumes after broken down tanker tugged away

    04/06/2023
  • Politics

    U.S., China trade blame as hopes for military dialogue fade

    04/06/2023

    Romney Senate challenger Trent Staggs receives endorsement from Utah’s largest police union

    03/06/2023

    Biden says debt ceiling bill avoids catastrophic economic default

    03/06/2023

    Crowd erupts with applause after DeSantis fires back at heckler who called him ‘f—— fascist’

    02/06/2023

    Senate passes debt ceiling bill, sends to Biden

    02/06/2023
  • Economy

    Nearly 4,000 People In US Lost Their Jobs In May Because Of AI: Report

    04/06/2023

    3 signs you may need a credit card hiatus

    04/06/2023

    President Joe Biden signs debt limit bill, avoiding US default

    04/06/2023

    Money from Cheddar Auto Group car show in to go toward nonprofit group Sojourner House

    03/06/2023

    Good Debt and Bad Debt: A Quick Guide to Wise Use of Borrowing for Financial Success

    03/06/2023
  • Business

    Robotics guru lists the next three industries to be automated

    04/06/2023

    Bursa Malaysia to remain below 1,400 pts due to US, China concerns

    03/06/2023

    Mastering the Art of Frugal Living

    02/06/2023

    Why Every Modern Enterprise Organization Needs Insight-Driven Marketing

    02/06/2023

    The Little Mermaid key to Disney live action remake strategy

    31/05/2023
  • Technology

    Malicious Android spyware detected in over 100 popular apps

    04/06/2023

    How Facebook secretly collects your information even if you haven’t signed up

    03/06/2023

    Crypto bill from Republicans to define roles of SEC, CFTC

    02/06/2023

    Microsoft inks deal with CoreWeave to meet OpenAI cloud demand

    01/06/2023

    How to explain AI to children and tips for keeping them safe with scams on the rise

    01/06/2023
  • Science

    Shrimp Vision to Aid Driverless Cars

    04/06/2023

    How to watch the almost-live stream of Mars

    04/06/2023

    The Upper Atmosphere Is Cooling, Prompting New Climate Concerns

    04/06/2023

    Watch Mars ‘livestream’ by the European Space Agency – latest updates

    03/06/2023

    More than 400 Grail patients incorrectly told they may have cancer

    03/06/2023
  • Entertainment

    Heres the secret meaning behind Taylor Swifts Era Tour jewellery

    04/06/2023

    The Best Steve McQueen Movies of All Time

    04/06/2023

    Jonah Hill & GF Olivia Millar Welcome First Baby Together (Report)

    04/06/2023

    Is Devi Graduating This Year? Details Inside

    03/06/2023

    12 Things Older Women Confess They Admire in The Newer Women Generations

    03/06/2023
  • Sports

    Washington Nationals news & notes: Nats drop 4-2 decision to Phillies; MacKenzie Gore vs PHI; Kyle Finnegan on Friday…

    04/06/2023

    Gerald McCoy Discusses Bucs’ Chances To Win NFC South

    04/06/2023

    White Sox win on walk-off wild pitch in extra innings

    04/06/2023

    Irene Aldana Draws Inspiration from Fellow Mexicans, ‘So Ready’ to Shock the World at UFC 289 Next Saturday

    03/06/2023

    Omar Morales Vs. Shane Young (Featherweight) UFC 260

    03/06/2023
  • Health

    Weight-Loss Surgery Still Beats Ozempic

    04/06/2023

    ‘Like Google Street View’: NVision’s quantum tech allows MRI imaging to show metabolism gone awry

    04/06/2023

    Long COVID Is Disabling. So Is It a ‘Disability’?

    04/06/2023

    Vitamin deficiency: 5 tell-tale signs of Vitamin C, D and other micronutrient deficiencies in your body

    03/06/2023

    We’re in the Wait-and-Watch Era of COVID

    03/06/2023
Toppikr
Home»World»Middle East»Exclusive interview: Erdogan hails ‘special relationship’ with Putin ahead of crucial runoff vote
Middle East

Exclusive interview: Erdogan hails ‘special relationship’ with Putin ahead of crucial runoff vote

19/05/2023No Comments8 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
230519041008-01-erdogan-cnn-interview-051923-grab.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Editor’s Note: A version of this story appears in CNN’s Meanwhile in the Middle East newsletter, a three-times-a-week look inside the region’s biggest stories. Sign up here.


Istanbul
CNN
 — 

Turkey has a “special” and growing relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin despite mounting pressure on Ankara to help bolster Western sanctions against Moscow, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in an exclusive interview ahead of next week’s presidential election runoff.

“We are not at a point where we would impose sanctions on Russia like the West have done. We are not bound by the West’s sanctions,” Erdogan told CNN’s Becky Anderson. “We are a strong state and we have a positive relationship with Russia.”

“Russia and Turkey need each other in every field possible,” he added.

Erdogan is the apparent frontrunner in the Turkish presidential race which heads to a runoff vote on May 28. He and his principal rival, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, have diverged on a number of foreign policy issues, including diplomacy with the West and Russia.

Kilicdaroglu has vowed to repair years of strained diplomacy with the West.

He has also said he would not seek to emulate Erdogan’s personality-driven relationship with Putin, and instead recalibrate Ankara’s relationship to Moscow to be “state-driven.”

But in the days leading up to the first round of the presidential race on May 14, Kilicdaroglu sharpened his tone on the Kremlin, accusing it of meddling in Turkey’s election and threatening to rupture the relationship between the two countries.

“Dear Russian friends, you are behind the montages, conspiracies, deep fake content and tapes that were exposed in this country yesterday,” he said on Twitter.

“If you want the continuation of our friendship after May 15, get your hands off the Turkish state,” Kilicdaroglu said.

By contrast, Erdogan has doubled down on his relationship with Putin – and he thinks the West should follow suit. “The West is not leading a very balanced approach,” he told CNN. “You need a balanced approach towards a country such as Russia, which would have been a much more fortunate approach.”

He has accused his rival of seeking to “detach” Turkey from Russia.

Since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Turkish strongman has emerged as a key powerbroker, adopting a crucial balancing act between the two sides, widely known as “pro-Ukrainian neutrality.”

He helped broker a key agreement known as the Black Sea Grain Corridor Initiative that unlocked millions of tons of wheat caught up in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, averting a global hunger crisis. The agreement was extended for another two months on Wednesday, one day before it was set to expire.

“This was possible because of our special relationship with President Putin,” he told CNN, referring to the grain deal.

Russian-Turkish trade comes to $62 billion annually. Earlier this year, Putin waived Turkish gas payments to Russia in a move that was believed to help bolster Erdogan’s chances in the election.

Erdogan also helped secure an exchange of prisoners of war between Ukraine and Russia, in addition to hosting some liberated Ukrainian POWS in Turkey, and providing Kyiv with arms. Still his close ties with Putin have made his Western allies nervous.

In his interview with CNN, Erdogan tackled another key flashpoint in Turkish tensions with the West: Sweden’s accession to NATO. Turkey – NATO’s second largest army – has blocked Stockholm’s membership in the alliance, accusing it of harboring militants from the banned Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

“As long as Sweden continues to allow the offshoots of terror groups in Turkey to roam free in Sweden, in the streets of Stockholm, we cannot look favorably on Sweden’s membership in NATO,” Erdogan said.

“We’re not ready for Sweden right now,” he added. “Because a NATO country should have a strong stance when it comes to fighting terrorism.”

Sweden has refused Turkey’s repeated requests to extradite individuals Ankara describes as terrorists, arguing that the issue can only be decided by Swedish courts.

Erdogan also criticized US President Joe Biden for calling him an “autocrat” in his 2020 campaign for the White House. “Would a dictator ever enter a runoff election?” Erdogan questioned.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan tells CNN's Becky Anderson, left, he expects voters who value stability and confidence to back him in the May 28 runoff vote.

Erdogan struck an optimistic note about the ongoing presidential race. “This is a new experience for Turkish democracy. I believe my people will turn up for a strong democracy in next Sunday’s elections,” he said.

He secured a nearly five-point lead over Kilicdaroglu in the election’s first round on May 14. His ruling Justice and Development (AK) party also won a comfortable parliamentary majority.

Erdogan told CNN that he expected his party’s strong performance in the parliamentary contest to boost his chances in the presidential runoff, arguing that voters may be deterred by the prospect of voting for a hung parliament. “Stability and confidence are very important and people who look for stability will do what is necessary at the polls,” he said.

Neither candidate surpassed the 50% threshold needed to clinch the presidential win in the first round.

The result defied opinion polls, which predicted a slight lead for Kilicdaroglu, the 74-year-old bureaucrat and leader of the left-leaning CHP.

Six opposition groups had formed an unprecedented unified front to try to wrest power from Erdogan, who also faced headwinds from a flailing economy and the aftermath of the devastating earthquake on February 6 which killed more than 50,000 people.

The opposition has described the election as a last stand for Turkish democracy, accusing Erdogan of hollowing out the country’s democratic institutions during his 20-year rule, eroding the power of the judiciary and repressing dissent.

Erdogan arrives for a meeting in Istanbul, Turkey, on May 18, 2023.

The president’s detractors also blamed his unorthodox economic policies – namely his refusal to raise interest rates – for unfettered inflation and a plummeting lira.

In his interview with CNN, Erdogan denied cracking down on freedoms, claiming that “nobody is behind bars for their ideas in Turkey.” According to Reporters Without Borders, more than 100 journalists, lawyers and local politicians were arrested in the weeks leading up to Sunday’s elections.

He also defended his decision to suppress interest rates and claimed it has already yielded positive results. “I have a thesis that interest rates and inflation are positively correlated. The lower the interest rates, the lower inflation will be,” said Erdogan. “We have seen results in terms of the steps we have taken.”

The government’s shambolic initial response to the massive earthquake – which officials have acknowledged and apologized for – was also expected to buoy the opposition. But on May 14, Erdogan won the majority of votes in Turkey’s devastated southeast.

Turkey’s nearly 4 million-strong Syrian refugee population is also a tinderbox issue in this election. Kilicdaroglu has promised to deport Syrian refugees. The race’s third-place candidate, Sinan Ogan, is an ultra-nationalist who has said he would endorse the candidate with the more stringent refugee policy.

This appears to have prompted Kilicdaroglu to take on a hardened stance on refugees in his campaign videos. Meanwhile, Erdogan has told CNN that he won’t bend to Ogan’s wishes.

“I’m not a person who likes to negotiate in such a manner,” he said, responding to speculation about Ogan emerging as a kingmaker in the runoff. “It will be the people who are the kingmakers.”

Erdogan has dismissed opposition calls for a comprehensive deportation of refugees and has said that he will instead “encourage” around a million refugees to return to Syria. He said Turkey was building infrastructure and homes in Turkish-controlled parts of the war-torn country to facilitate their repatriation.

“Turkish NGOs are building residential units in northern Syria so that refugees here can go back to their homeland. This process has already started,” he told CNN. “We are encouraging one million refugees to go back to their homeland.”

Electoral campaigns around deporting Syrians in Turkey come as part of a regional drive to push displaced Syrians back to the crisis-ridden country. Jordan and Lebanon, which also host millions of Syrian refugees, have also called for mass repatriation.

It also comes as part of a wave of regional normalization with the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, despite numerous allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity levelled against the dictator.

Erdogan, who backed armed Islamist opposition groups in Syria’s civil war, said he is also keen to turn the page, through Assad’s main backer, Putin.

“(Through) my friendship with President Putin, we thought we could open a door, specifically in our fight against terrorism in the northern part of Syria, which requires close cooperation and solidarity,” he said, referring to Kurdish militants in northeast Syria.

“If we can do that, I said I see no obstacle that would remain in the way of our reconciliation,” he said, while promising to maintain Turkey’s presence in northern Syria despite Assad preconditioning talks on Ankara’s withdrawal from the territory.

“We have more than 900 kilometres of border and there is a constant terror threat from those borders on our country,” he said. “The only reason we have a military presence on the border is to fight against terrorism. That’s the sole reason.”



Source

ahead crucial Erdogan exclusive hails interview Putin relationship runoff special vote
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
TOPPIKR
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

TOPPIKR is an international news website that covers everything from current events, politics, entertainment, culture, tech, science, and healthcare. This also includes everything from video games and music to movies and gadgets.

Related Posts

Three Israeli soldiers and an Egyptian policeman killed in rare border crossing incident

04/06/2023

Exclusive: Inside Ukraine’s secretive drone program

03/06/2023

Solaris Entertainment Sets Documentary About Anne Beatts, Pioneering ‘SNL’ Writer (Exclusive)

03/06/2023

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Entertainment

Heres the secret meaning behind Taylor Swifts Era Tour jewellery

04/06/2023

The Best Steve McQueen Movies of All Time

04/06/2023

Jonah Hill & GF Olivia Millar Welcome First Baby Together (Report)

04/06/2023

Is Devi Graduating This Year? Details Inside

03/06/2023
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
World

Russian minister rips Washington nuclear arms treaty ‘ultimatums,’ demands US halt ‘hostile’ policy on Moscow

04/06/2023

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov reportedly said Saturday that Moscow’s move to suspend its…

What is Chattanooga Known For? Get to Know Your City

04/06/2023

India train crash: Cause and people responsible have been identified, rail minister says

04/06/2023

This key retirement tool is getting a big boost next year

04/06/2023

Subscribe for Updates

Get the latest creative news from TOPPIKR about world, politics and business.

About Us
About Us

TOPPIKR is an International news website founded by a team of passionate, developers and journalists.
The site consists mainly of articles to news stories from other outlets about politics, entertainment, and current events. it also has a newsletter featured by many global columnists.

We're accepting new partnerships currently.

Politics

U.S., China trade blame as hopes for military dialogue fade

04/06/2023

Romney Senate challenger Trent Staggs receives endorsement from Utah’s largest police union

03/06/2023

Biden says debt ceiling bill avoids catastrophic economic default

03/06/2023

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest RSS
  • ABOUT TOPPIKR
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • GDPR Notice
© 2023 TopPikr. All Rights Reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in settings.

Toppikr
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.