It says "unstamped" envelopes and ballots will be counted as valid unless there's evidence they were brought from elsewhere/outside.
— Ebru Erdem Akcay (@eerdem) April 16, 2017
OSCE: Referendum contested on “unlevel playing field”
OSCE international observers said in an April 17 statement that the referendum was contested on an “unlevel playing field”. The statement said the voting process was well administered, but voters were not provided with impartial information about key aspects of the reforms, and that limitations to fundamental freedoms had a negative effect.“The referendum did not live up to Council of Europe standards. The legal framework was inadequate for the holding of a genuinely democratic process.” Cezar Florin Preda, head of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe delegation.Tana de Zulueta, head of the ODIHR limited election observation mission, said fundamental freedoms essential to a genuinely democratic process were curtailed under Turkey’s ongoing state of emergency. “Our monitoring showed the ‘Yes’ campaign dominated the media coverage and this, along with restrictions on the media, the arrests of journalists and the closure of media outlets, reduced voters’ access to a plurality of views,” de Zulueta said. The OSCE mission found that provincial governors used state-of-emergency powers to place restrictions on assembly and expression of views. “A state of emergency should never be used to undermine the rule of law,” Preda said. The statement says the legal framework for the referendum did not sufficiently provide for impartial coverage, nor did it guarantee eligible political parties equal access to public media. It said preference was given to the ruling AK party and President Erdoğan in the allocation of free airtime, and that the YSK’s authority to sanction for biased coverage was repealed. According to the OSCE, the YSK decided that civil society organisations were not permitted to hold campaign events. “We observed the misuse of state resources, as well as the obstruction of ‘No’ campaign events,” de Zulueta said, adding that some senior officials equated ‘No’ supporters with terrorist sympathisers, and that “in numerous cases ‘No’ supporters faced police interventions and violent scuffles at their events.” The statement said referendum day proceeded in an orderly and efficient manner in the limited number of polling stations visited by international observers. In some cases, access was denied or limited for observers at the opening of and during voting in polling stations. In some cases, police checked voters’ identification documents before granting them access. The statement also pointed to the YSK decision which changed ballot validity criteria as undermining an important safeguard and contradicting the law. De Zulueta said that the mission has not yet had an opportunity to have a meeting on this matter.
Latest updates
#Turkey #referendum2017 unofficial overall results
— ANADOLU AGENCY (@anadoluagency) April 16, 2017
YES: 51.74%
NO: 48.26%
Ballots opened: 94.74%https://t.co/pCgJ7oPKXj pic.twitter.com/HUMeo6ZKG8
Anadolu:
95.04% ballots opened – Yes 51.7%; No 48.3%
Yes leads by 1,576,840 votes
https://twitter.com/kshaheen/status/853645784448946177
No leads in Turkey's 3 largest cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir
— DAILY SABAH (@DailySabah) April 16, 2017
Yes 51.87% | No 48.13%
93.94% of ballot boxes openhttps://t.co/uc7cht5iNU pic.twitter.com/VcWuZz116Y
#Breaking No votes creep ahead in Ankara by 6 k votes #Turkeyreferendum
— Amberin Zaman (@amberinzaman) April 16, 2017