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Your state service Turkey under the president Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened the Turkish Cypriot leader, Mustafa akinci, and his family not to be a candidate in the illegal elections that will take place tomorrow Sunday in occupied Cyprus. The complaint was made by Akinci himself, on a television program on a Turkish Cypriot station, in which he participated with a view to the “elections”.
“You know that there are services in Turkey that belong to the president,” Akinci said.
“Unfortunately, the message was relayed to me through my office director that ‘it would be better for you, your family and yours not to be a candidate.’
After the incident, Mustafa Akinci clarified that he called the Turkish ambassador in Nicosia to ask for an explanation, but did not respond to the invitation.
For its part, the Turkish embassy in the occupied territories denied what Akinci claims. A statement read: “The Turkish Republic is determined to protect the life and property of each individual Turkish Cypriot, as well as the safe conduct of elections.” We have repeatedly pointed out in our advertisements the problems caused by the use of Turkey as an object of a pre-election conflict “.
Openly in favor of Tatar
President Erdogan’s government openly supports Sunday’s illegitimate “presidential” elections in the occupied areas of its current and elected prime minister, Ersin Tatar, against the current “president” Mustafa Akinci.
The Turkish media controlled by the Erdogan regime accuse Akinci of serving the interests of the Greek Cypriots, while last Thursday, in a move in support of Tatar, the occupying authorities opened the waterfront of the Varosion in his city, which has been closed since 1974 Famagusta.
The decision to open the beach was announced two days earlier by Erdogan himself, in Ankara, in the presence of Tatar.
The move led to the collapse of the occupying government, as “government” partner Kudret Ozersay protested that he had not been informed.
Complaints about Ankara’s open intervention in favor of the Tartars in Sunday’s “elections” are growing. The latest complaint concerns the provision of 2,000 Turkish liras (approximately 215 euros) to 10,000 Turkish Cypriots and settlers, under the guise of social assistance as part of measures to combat the coronavirus.
See images of the inauguration of Varosia on the website of the Turkish Cypriot newspaper Yeni Duzen:
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