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Pro-Kurdish opposition prepares for snap poll in Turkey

Despite the wave of arrests and disillusioned voters, the new leader of the Peoples’ Democratic Party says it will still win enough votes to enter parliament if elections are moved forward.

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Supporters of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party wave party flags as they attend its congress in Ankara, Turkey, Feb. 11, 2018. — ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images

Turkey’s embattled opposition Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) said on Thursday it is preparing for a possible early general election in which it expects to clear the 10% vote threshold to enter parliament, despite a government crackdown that has jailed nine of its lawmakers and largely crippled the Kurdish political movement.

The HDP, which draws support largely from Kurdish voters, has seen almost all 102 mayors from a sister party ousted from their posts and thousands of party members arrested on charges of supporting Kurdish militants, which the party denies. Dozens of Kurdish civil society groups and news outlets have also been banned, part of a broader clampdown during a state of emergency imposed after a failed military coup in 2016. The HDP is not implicated in the putsch.

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