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Turkey's Erdogan blasts autonomy call by Kurdish party as 'treason'

Kurdish leader Selahattin Demirtas had said that Kurds must choose between living autonomously or under 'one man's tyranny'
President of Turkey Recep Erdogan arrives to welcome the President of Afghanistan Ashraf Ghani (AFP)
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday blasted a call by a leading Kurdish politician for autonomy for the country's Kurdish minority as "treason".
 
"What the co-leader has done is treason, provocation," Erdogan told reporters at Istanbul airport before leaving for Saudi Arabia. 
 
Selahattin Demirtas, co-leader of the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), said at the weekend that Kurds in Turkey had to decide whether to live in autonomy or "under one man's tyranny".
 
Erdogan condemned the comment as unconstitutional.
 
"How dare you talk about establishing a state in the southeast and in the east within Turkey's existing unitary structure," Erdogan said, referring to Demirtas. 
 
"You cannot take such a step. Neither the national will, nor our security forces, armed forces, police, village guards allow such a thing," he warned. 
 
Demirtas has emerged as Erdogan's key rival over the past year, with many commentators saying he is the only politician to rival the rhetorical skills of the president. 
 
Turkish prosecutors on Monday opened a criminal investigation against Demirtas on accusations of committing crimes against the constitutional order.
 
Erdogan said: "I believe that the treachery network dealing a blow to our country's unity will learn a lesson it deserves from our people and from the law."

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