Bulgarian DOST party to appeal election result

By Ihvan Radoykov and Cihan Demirci

SOFIA, Bulgaria (AA) – Bulgaria’s DOST party is to challenge the result of Sunday’s general election, its leader said Tuesday.

“We will appeal to the Constitutional Court to cancel the election results,” Lutvi Mestan, who heads the Democrats for Responsibility, Freedom and Tolerance party (DOST), told Anadolu Agency.

Many Turkish-Bulgarian voters who live in Turkey were prevented from voting in the poll by border protests.

Bulgaria also has a Turkish minority that makes up around 10 percent of the population, according to official census figures.

“In these elections, we were alone in the face of everyone, fighting not only with political forces but with the state and the government,” Mestan said.

“I am sure that we would have been even more successful if the obstacles had not happened,” he added.

DOST, which means “close friend” in Turkish, generally has ethnic Turks or Muslims among its members.

Former Prime Minister Boyko Borissov’s center-right GERB party took the most votes in the early general election, winning 32.55 percent. DOST took 8.94 percent of the vote, failing to pass a threshold to gain parliamentary seats.

Mestan said the parliament “cannot represent the will of people” without DOST and accused nationalist United Patriots leaders of supporting the border protests.

“Bulgarian policy has been totally overtaken by racists but racist party leaders cannot be solely hold responsible for these events,” he said. “Other party leaders are also responsible for it.”

Meanwhile, Nedim Donmez, chairman of the Edirne Balkan Turks’ Federation said his group would also launch legal action.

– 200,000 voters in Turkey

He told Anadolu Agency that in the 2016 general election, voters were able to use 140 ballot boxes in Turkey but this number was reduced to 35 on Sunday, a move the Turkish Foreign Ministry said was intended to hinder Turkish-Bulgarians from voting.

Donmez said that two days before the election, Bulgarian officials decided that application forms would be completed in the rooms where the boxes were kept, causing further problems.

Turkish-Bulgarians who did not understand the Bulgarian language also had difficulty with the forms, he added.

According to Donmez, there are around 200,000 people in Turkey eligible to vote.

On Sunday, around 30,000 were able to vote, compared to more than 90,000 in 2009, he said.

Donmez said the legal challenge would first be lodged at Bulgarian courts but the case could go to the European Court of Human Rights if unsatisfied.

“We cannot tolerate restrictions on human rights,” he said.

Sunday’s election — the fifth time since May 2013 that Bulgarians have gone to the polls — took place amid tensions between Ankara and Sofia.

Disputes erupted over claims Turkey was favoring the DOST coalition and on Friday, right-wing activists staged a demonstration in at the Kapitan Andreevo border to block expat Bulgarian voters living in Turkey from taking part.

The demonstrators, many brandishing anti-Turkey banners and Bulgarian flags, blocked traffic at the border, forcing passengers from Turkey to disembark from buses and walk across the frontier on foot.

Last week’s protests also drew a response from senior Turkish Cabinet ministers.

ALATURKA AİLESİ ÜYELERİ NE DİYOR?