-
India bank on formidable home Test record in South Africa series
-
Australia's Hazlewood in injury scare ahead of first Ashes Test
-
No ordinary Joe: Stokes backs Root to fire in Australia
-
Humans can no longer tell AI music from the real thing: survey
-
House vote likely Wednesday on ending US government shutdown
-
Sixers edge Celtics while Thunder reach NBA-best 11-1
-
Cambodia's Prince Group denies link to scams after asset seizures
-
Stokes bats away criticism of England's Ashes preparations
-
Russia loses legal bid to build embassy next to Australian parliament
-
Ethiopia's invasive prosopis tree chokes livelihoods and land
-
'We're already living in science fiction': The neurotech revolution
-
Ousted Gabon leader's wife and son sentenced to 20 years for graft
-
Asian markets up on hopes over shutdown deal, rate cut
-
Bangladesh's liquor industry a surprising success
-
Nepal's war victims watch political changes with fragile hope
-
France aim to secure World Cup place as Paris marks attacks anniversary
-
Russia jails teen musician over anti-war street songs for third time
-
Demand for air con set to triple by 2050, warns UN
-
Trump claims 'very big victory' as shutdown vote nears
-
Indigenous protesters clash with security at COP30 summit in Brazil
-
France warns over Caribbean 'instability' as G7 talks open
-
Brazil tries to avoid climate bust up at COP30 summit
-
Ethiopia set to host UN's 2027 climate summit, 2026 undecided
-
Close Zelensky ally accused of orchestrating major graft scheme
-
'Trump is temporary': California governor Newsom seizes COP30 spotlight
-
US stocks end mostly higher despite drop in Nvidia
-
Arrival of US aircraft carrier fuels Venezuelan fears of attack
-
Iraqi voters turn out in numbers as region watches on
-
Pakistan upstage Sri Lanka in first ODI as Agha and Rauf shine
-
Macron warns any planned West Bank annexation a 'red line'
-
BBC must fight, says outgoing chief as Trump threatens to sue
-
UN aid chief hails talks with Sudan army leader
-
Mellon Blue diamond sells for $25.6 million
-
Google unveils $6.4 bn investment in Germany
-
US aircraft carrier in Latin America fuels Venezuelan fears of attack
-
For many Syrians, Sharaa's US visit marks new beginning
-
Monumental art displayed in shade of Egypt's pyramids
-
Stocks mixed as tech titans struggle
-
California governor Newsom slams Trump at COP30
-
Alcaraz fights back to beat Fritz at ATP Finals
-
Russia offers US nuclear talks in bid to ease tensions
-
Turkey seeks more than 2,000 years behind bars for Erdogan rival
-
UK court jails Chinese bitcoin fraudster for over 11 years
-
Fanfare as Guinea launches enormous Simandou iron ore mine
-
Iraqis vote in general election at crucial regional moment
-
Shock follows carnage after suicide bombing in Islamabad
-
Ford returns to pull England strings against All Blacks
-
Stocks mixed as end to US shutdown appears closer
-
BBC must 'fight' for its journalism, outgoing chief says amid Trump lawsuit threat
-
Atalanta turn to Palladino after Juric sacking
Wars, religion and football: five faces of Erdogan
Abhorred and adored, Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been compared to sultans and pharaohs while stamping his outsized personality and domineering style on Turkey over 20 years.
Elected as prime minister and then as an uber-powerful president under a tailor-made constitution, Erdogan has become Turkey's most important and polarising leader in generations.
A builder, a political brawler and a campaign beast, here are five of Erdogan's most emblematic traits.
- Builder -
Filling Turkey with bridges, highways and airports, Erdogan has propelled the developing country into the 21st century with mega-investments, stimulating growth.
He calls them his "crazy projects": a towering third bridge over the Bosphorus, another one across the Sea of Marmara, a third spanning the Dardanelles Strait.
They all set records, as did Istanbul's Camlica Mosque -- the largest in Turkey, replete with six minarets and space for 30,000 worshippers.
But perhaps the grandest of the megaprojects is the Istanbul Canal, being built just west of the Bosphorus on land the city once envisioned as an evacuation zone in case of a long-feared earthquake.
There is much more, including high-speed rail, a third Istanbul airport -- designed to be the world's largest -- and power plants, including the country's first nuclear one, controversially built by Russia.
- Football player -
Raised in Istanbul's working-class district of Kasimpasa, the young Erdogan dreamt of little but football, kicking around a ball made of paper and rags, according to popular lore.
His tall frame -- 1.85 metres, or just over six feet -- made him a sought-after centre-forward.
He received offers from several professional clubs, including Istanbul's Fenerbahce.
But his father, an austere sailor from the Black Sea, told him to pursue religious studies.
Erdogan gave up reluctantly but remained a big fan, mingling with players throughout his career.
In 2014, businessmen with ties to Erdogan's ruling party acquired Basaksehir, the least storied of Istanbul's six clubs.
Based in a conservative district of the same name, Basaksehir quickly became a powerhouse, winning the league in 2020.
- Pious Muslim -
Erdogan's father would have approved if the future president had instead become an imam.
In the secular Turkey created by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Erdogan attended one of the first religious public schools, combining studies of the Koran with other subjects.
Islam became the rallying cry of his electorate and its new movement, called the Justice and Development Party (AKP).
Erdogan advocates piety, frowns on smoking and drinking, and defends traditional family values at the expense of the LGBTQ community and emancipated women.
The AKP celebrates motherhood as well as the wearing of headscarves at school and in the civil service -- a right that Ataturk had abolished with Turkey's formation in 1923.
- Gifted orator -
A master campaigner who comes alive on stage, Erdogan is a gifted public speaker who relishes a challenge, priding himself on never losing a national election.
Derailed by stomach issues in recent days, past campaigns have seen Erdogan hop between eight cities in a day, giving impassioned speeches to crowds of supporters.
A populist and a performer, he announces pay hikes, kisses babies, hugs elderly women and even hands out small change to kids -- a custom on religious holidays.
Pro-government media, which now dominates, lap it all up, broadcasting his performances live across the nation and replaying them deep into the night.
- Regional powerbroker -
Erdogan has leveraged Turkey's strategic position between Europe and the Middle East -- guarding the southern shores of the Black Sea and the northern ones of the Mediterranean -- to diplomatic advantage.
He assumed the role of mediator when Russia invaded Ukraine, becoming one of the few world leaders with open access to Vladimir Putin and Russia's vast energy resources.
But he also supplied Kyiv with weapons and won international plaudits for helping broker a deal to resume Ukraine's grain exports.
On the other hand, he drew Western wrath for launching incursions into Syria. At one stage, he appeared to be simultaneously brawling with all of Turkey's neighbours, stretching from Iraq to Greece.
He broke off relations with Israel and Egypt, intervened in the war in Libya, and helped Azerbaijan defeat Armenia in their 2020 war over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Facing a new economic crisis, Erdogan has been mending fences, seeking investments and engaging in "earthquake diplomacy" with Greece after a massive February shock killed more than 50,000 people.
M.Thompson--AMWN