![]() ![]() Up to 85 percent of the downtown either collapsed or will have to be demolished, according to the Turkish Chamber of Civil Engineers, and much of the infrastructure is out of commission: Many roads are closed, most shops remain shut, and bathroom facilities are scarce. They might get good news on Sunday, when the election results could be clear, or a little later if there is a runoff vote, but for now, in the provincial capital of Antakya, there’s little on offer but heartbreak. Now they are coming back, even if just for a day-and many say it’s explicitly to vote out Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Out of the roughly 1.1 million registered voters in the province, around 400,000 left when several earthquakes devastated the province in February. Read more of FP’s coverage of Turkey’s pivotal elections. ![]() ANTAKYA, Turkey-The only road heading into the center of Turkey’s southern Hatay province is already packed with traffic jams as people pour back in to vote in Sunday’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
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