“I voted for Erdoğan because he deserves to be re-elected,” says Esra Köse, 45, who like the majority of Turkish voters in Germany backs the incumbent president.
Köse, who has lived for nearly two decades in Europe’s top economy and wears a Muslim headscarf, cast her ballot for Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in Essen, in the western industrial region of the Ruhr.
It is the Turkish leader’s biggest stronghold in Germany, where the second round of voting began Saturday and lasts until late Tuesday, five days before the run-off election in Turkey.
In the first round in early May, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan won more than 75 percent of the vote in Essen, around 10 points above the average of 65 percent in Germany, which has the largest Turkish community abroad with its 1.5 million voters.
“I voted for Erdoğan because with him, the country is going in the right direction,” said Nevin Toy-Unkel, another voter in Essen.
The 53-year-old AKP supporter grew up in Germany and like many second and third generation Turks in the Ruhr, she is the child of a miner.
The Turkish immigrants in the 1960s known as guest workers “were poorly qualified people, often from rural areas and more conservative than the bourgeoisie in the cities,” Yunus Ulusoy, from the Centre for Turkish Studies at the University of Duisburg-Essen, told AFP.
Attachment to religion
“And they passed on their values and their attachment to religion to their children,” Ulusoy added.
Around the neck of Toy-Unkel, an interior designer based in Marl near Essen, hangs a necklace with the crescent and star of the Turkish flag.
Her father was originally from Konya in central Turkey, another Erdoğan stronghold.
In front of the Grugahalle arena in Essen, transformed for the occasion into a gigantic polling station, Turkish flags flap under a radiant sun.
Some voters have donned t-shirts in the national colors and are making the pro-Erdoğan four-finger salute.
Music composed in honor of Erdoğan wafts through the air — a show of support “which is normally forbidden near polling stations,” İnci Öykü Yener-Roderburg, a researcher at the University of Dortmund, told AFP.
“During the first round, we saw Erdoğan’s supporters attempt to intimidate those of the opposition parties,” said the Turkish political scientist who has observed the elections in Essen as a researcher.
Five people are monitoring the voting here: “two civil servants — often imams of the Ditib mosques, which are linked to the Turkish state” along with one AKP member, another from the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) a formation supporting Erdoğan, “and only one member of the opposition party,” the Republican People’s Party (CHP).
“As a result, there is a lot of psychological pressure on the latter,” she said.
Free buses
“Opposition supporters were insulted occasionally or pushed aside in the first round,” she said.
Moreover, Erdoğan’s voters are much better organized in Germany than the opposition.
“Every Friday, during prayers at the mosque, a lot of propaganda can be spread,” says Cemalettin Özer, 52, a resident of Bielefeld near Essen who actively supports the CHP.
Özer said the AKP backers “receive money from the Turkish state so that they can take voters to the polling stations for free by bus.”
“We do everything as volunteers and try with our own cars to drive people to the polls, sometimes 70 kilometers (40 miles) from their homes,” he said.
In addition, “many supporters of the social democrats (CHP) in Germany have given up their Turkish citizenship” to become German, he noted, meaning they cannot vote.
In Germany, it is difficult to be a dual national although the current center-left-led government is moving to change this.
Meanwhile “AKP supporters have kept their Turkish passports. Erdoğan’s party therefore has a larger potential voter base” than the opposition parties, Özer said.
Despite Erdoğan’s lead in the first round, the opposition’s mobilization has grown.
“Many people, especially young people who had not voted, have come out for the second round,” Özer insisted.
Accompanied by her mother Esra Köse, who still speaks little German after 19 years in Essen, 18-year-old Feyza Köse cast her ballot on Monday.
Wearing Western clothes and preparing to study physics and mathematics, Feyza said her vote also went to Erdoğan.
“He’s made the right decisions for the country,” she said
Source: turkishminute