Turkey will end on Wednesday its contentious state of emergency that was imposed in the aftermath of a failed coup against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in July 2016. Erdogan declared the state of emergency on July 20, 2016, five days after warplanes bombed Ankara and bloody clashes broke out in Istanbul in a doomed putsch bid that claimed 249 lives. The measure, which normally lasts three months but was extended seven times, has seen the detention of some 80,000 people and about double that number sacked from jobs in public institutions. The biggest purge of Turkeys modern history has targeted not just alleged supporters of Fethullah Gulen, the US-based preacher blamed for the coup, but also Kurdish activists and leftists. The former leaders of the opposition pro-Kurdish Peoples Democratic Party (HDP) -- Figen Yuksekdag and Selahattin Demirtas -- are still languishing in jail following their arrest in November 2016 on charges of links to Kurdish militants. In the run up to the May presidential elections, Erdogan pledged to end the state of emergency if he is elected. He swept presidential and parliamentary elections and the emergency state is set to end at 1:00 am on Thursday (2200 GMT Wednesday) simply by virtue of the government not asking that it be extended. The government has, however, submitted a new legislation to parliament that apparently seeks to formalize some of the harshest aspects of the emergency. The bill, dubbed "anti-terror" legislation by pro-government media, will be discussed at commission level on Thursday and then in plenary session on Monday. The main opposition Republican Peoples Party (CHP) said the new measures would amount to a state of emergency on their own. "With this bill, with the measures in this text, the state of emergency will not be extended for three months, but for three years," said the head of the CHPs parliamentary faction, Ozgur Ozel. Under the proposed legislation, the authorities will retain for three more years the power to sack civil servants deemed linked to "terror" groups, retaining a key power of the state of emergency. Protests and gatherings will be banned in open public areas after sunset, although they can be authorized until midnight if they do not disturb the public order. Local authorities will be able to prohibit individuals from entering or leaving a defined area for 15 days on security grounds. And suspect can be held without charge for 48 hours or up to four days in the case of multiple offenses. This period can be extended up to twice if there is difficulty in collecting evidence or if the case is deemed to be particularly voluminous. Erdogan was reelected under a new system that gives him greater powers than any Turkish leader since the aftermath of World War II. The new executive presidency means government ministries and public institutions are now centralized under the direct control of the presidency. Erdogan says it is necessary to have a more efficient government but the opposition claims it has placed Turkey squarely under one-man rule. "The end of the state of emergency does not mean our fight against terror is going to come to an end," said Justice Minister Abdulhamit Gul.
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