The voting abroad process as part of the June 24 elections have been completed with the most recent figures pointing to an all-time high participation rate.
The voting which began on June 7 ended Tuesday, and of the 3,047,096 registered voters abroad, 1,486,410 voted in 123 consulate areas in 60 countries this time around.
According to the latest data provided by the Justice and Development Party's (AK Party) International Coordination Center for Foreign Election the participation rate reached 48.78 percent at this time. Voting at customs will continue until June 24. By then it is expected that the participation rate will exceed 50 percent, which points to a record in Turkish political history.
A total of 1,424,279 people abroad went to the ballots for the last presidential elections, while a total of 1,486,410 people have voted in this election. When compared, total participation between the April 16 referendum and this election, participation rate increased by 4.36%.
The three countries with the highest participation were Germany, France and the Netherlands. Germany was the country with the most votes with 717,992 voters. The Embassy of Stuttgart was the polling station that has the most participation with 81,959 voters. Germany has also been the center stage for controversy as opposition parties such as the pro-PKK Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) and the Republican People's Party (CHP) have been allowed to carry out election propaganda while the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) was banned from campaigning.
The Australian Embassy in Canberra was the representative with the highest increase in attendance by 73.7 percent. Turkmenistan, on the other hand, experienced the biggest drop with a 48.1 percent decrease compared to the previous election.
The ballots will be brought to Turkey by Turkish Airlines and will be kept at a convention hall in Ankara until the end of voting in mainland Turkey on June 24.
In the Nov. 1, 2015, general elections, 44.7 percent of the electorate abroad participated in elections, while 36.8 percent participated in the June 7 elections. In the April 16, 2017 referendum 44.8 percent of Turkish expats participated, of which 59.4 percent voted "yes" and 40.4 percent said "no" to the constitutional changes.
The head of Presidency for Turks Aboard and Related Communities (YTB), Abdullah Eren, said Saturday that they carried out a campaign for expats, under the slogan "Strong Diaspora, Strong Turkey."
He added that after the elections a subcommittee in the Parliament will be established for the Turks abroad. "In addition, a commission for our citizens abroad will be established in regions where we have consulates," Eren said at the Turkish consulate in Cologne, Germany.