Failed Ankara theme park touted as testament to government waste

Ankapark, a failed theme park for which millions of dollars were spent under the AKP administration in Ankara, has recently passed into the hands of the city’s current municipal administration.

Reuters

Giant dinosaurs and robot models abandoned among decrepit fair rides create a dystopian atmosphere in a defunct amusement park in the Turkish capital Ankara, which its opposition party Mayor is now highlighting as a testament to past government profligacy.

Three years ago, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan opened the massive theme park with great fanfare ahead of local elections, but his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) went on to lose control of the Ankara municipality at the subsequent vote.

This month, after a two-year legal battle, a court ruled to transfer control of "Ankapark" to the new city council run by the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) after the loss-making project fell into disrepair.

CHP Mayor, Mansur Yavaş, seized the opportunity to slam the use of public funds in a project he says cost $801 million, money which he said could have been used for more socially beneficial projects.

"Fifteen thousand social housing units or 300 student dormitories could have been built to meet the needs of the Ankara people," Yavaş said, after taking control of the development last week.

The dinosaur models, for which the park was famous, are now falling apart and lie strewn around the abandoned, weed-covered area the size of around 120 football pitches.

Yavaş' comments came ahead of presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled for next June, with opinion polls showing sharply waning support for Erdoğan and the AKP after nearly two decades in power.

The park, which took six years to build, was the brainchild of Melih Gökçek, the long-time AKP Mayor of Ankara. At the opening ceremony, Erdogan had said it would earn the municipality some $10 million annually.

However, the operator closed it down eight months later, in November, 2019, due to the losses it was suffering.

There has been little comment from AKP officials on the court move and the opposition accusations of wastefulness, but its deputy provincial head in Ankara, Mehmet Yılmazer, accused the Mayor of sabotaging the project.

"Mansur Yavaş has not provided any service to Ankara," Yılmazer said on Twitter. "He made Ankapark go bankrupt and then left it to rot."

Yavaş said the municipality will decide in consultation with city residents what to do with the park and was seeking development proposals through a website.

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