However, opposition party officials said the objections were
unlikely to alter the result of the presidential vote, which is
headed to a runoff on May 28 between Erdogan and challenger
Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
Muharrem Erkek, a deputy chairman of the secularist Republican
People's Party (CHP), said irregularities at each ballot box
ranged from one single wrongly counted vote to hundreds of such
votes.
He said the CHP had formally raised objections over 2,269 ballot
boxes nationwide for the presidential election and 4,825 for the
parliamentary vote that also took place on Sunday, though they
represent a tiny proportion of the total number.
"We are following every single vote, even if it does not change
the overall results," Erkek told reporters in Ankara.
Erdogan's ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party and its nationalist
allies won a strong parliamentary majority, while in the
presidential vote, Erdogan fell just shy of the 50% threshold
needed to win outright.
Kilicdaroglu, the CHP chair, received 44.9% in what was seen as
the biggest electoral challenge to Erdogan's 20-year rule. A
third candidate, Sinan Ogan obtained 5.17%.
Erdogan, now in pole position, says only he can ensure stability
in Turkey, a NATO member state, as it grapples with a
cost-of-living crisis, soaring inflation and the impact of
devastating earthquakes in February.
The opposition alliance that includes the CHP has urged young
voters to turn out to support Kilicdaroglu in the runoff.
Mehmet Emin Ekmen, a deputy chairman of DEVA, one of six parties
in the opposition alliance, told Reuters: "We do not have strong
evidence to say irregularities can change the presidential race
results or get another opposition candidate elected to the
parliament".
"Since Erdogan officially started his election campaign
yesterday, I believe the opposition alliance should also channel
its energy into the runoff," he said.
(Additional reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen in Ankara; Editing by
Jonathan Spicer and Gareth Jones)
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