The 27 items detailed in the Pelican files are listed below. • Erdoğan opposed and stopped the enacting of a 'transparency law', a piece of legislation that Davutoğlu had wanted to implement shortly after becoming prime minister. • Davutoğlu was allegedly in favour of the four former AKP government ministers, namely
Egemen Bağış,
Zafer Çağlayan,
Muammer Güler and
Erdoğan Bayraktar, being sent to the Supreme Court for their role in the
2013 government corruption scandal. AKP Members of Parliament later voted against the motion to send the four ministers to the Supreme Court after Erdoğan instructed them to block the motion. • Davutoğlu was responsible for the parliamentary candidacy of
Hakan Fidan, Undersecretary of the
National Intelligence Organisation (Turkish: Milli istihbarat Teşkilatı abbreviated MİT) for the
June 2015 general election, which was overturned by Erdoğan and resulted in Fidan being re-instated as MİT Undersecretary after he withdrew his candidacy. • Davutoğlu allowed the Dolmabahçe Statement, a result of negotiations during the
Solution process with Kurdish rebels, to be released in public. Following public criticism by Erdoğan, an important section of the Statement which established an 'Oversight Committee' was abandoned, followed shortly after by the entire solution process altogether. • Davutoğlu supported Deputy Prime Minister
Bülent Arınç, who publicly criticised Erdoğan over interfering with the Dolmabahçe Statement. • Relations also allegedly soured due to Davutoğlu giving press statements and interviews to media and news outlets that had been known for criticising Erdoğan. • Tensions between the two politicians after the June elections rose after Davutoğlu claimed that the people had rejected Erdoğan's call for an executive presidency. • It was alleged that Davutoğlu supported
Nationalist Movement Party (Turkish: Milliyetçi Hareket partisi abbreviated MHP) leader
Devlet Bahçeli after the June 2015 election resulted in a
hung parliament, who had claimed that the MHP's precondition for a coalition agreement with the AKP would be for Erdoğan's family (and in particular his son,
Bilal Erdoğan) to go on trial for alleged corruption. • A general disagreement between Davutoğlu and Erdoğan over whether the AKP should have pushed for a coalition agreement or early elections after the inconclusive June 2015 vote was also included in the files. • Davutoğlu was accused of establishing his own media network, including a newspaper, that would be supportive of him. • Davutoğlu was also accused of censoring some pro-Erdoğan media material. • It emerged that the establishment of the pro-Davutoğlu news outlets would be financed by an undisclosed allowance paid to the Office of the Prime Minister directly from the national budget. • It was further alleged that Davutoğlu and Erdoğan had argued over who would stand for election to the AKP's Central Executive Decision Committee (MKYK) in the party's
5th Ordinary Congress in September 2015. Erdoğan supporter
Binali Yıldırım had been collecting signatures for a potential leadership bid up until Davutoğlu backed down to Erdoğan's demands. • Disagreements over Davutoğlu's attempts to lift political immunities from prosecution, as well as his decision to consult the
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) on the proposals resulted in tensions with Erdoğan to increase further. • Erdoğan allegedly strongly protested Davutoğlu for claiming that his government could restart the
Solution process if the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) reverted to the situation in 2013. • Furthermore, Davutoğlu was criticised for not opposing an AKP MP who claimed that 'everything would be alright if the
Parallel state (
Gülen Movement) reverted to its factory values.' • Davutoğlu allegedly did not voice criticism over
European Parliament President
Martin Schulz calling Erdoğan 'authoritarian' in response to Erdoğan's calls for a German video criticising him to be censored. • Similarly, Erdoğan blamed Davutoğlu for not speaking up for the Presidency when Schulz claimed that Davutoğlu, as prime minister, would be recognised as the official representative of the Turkish Government in negotiations with the
European Union • The Presidency alleged that it was not consulted by Davutoğlu during the
European migrant crisis negotiations for visa-free entry by Turkish nationals to the European Union. Davutoğlu was also accused of not criticising European media outlets that had voiced scepticism of Erdoğan. • Competition between Davutoğlu and Erdoğan had been reported over who would get to meet US President
Barack Obama during an official visit to the
United States • Davutoğlu allegedly attempted to recruit some of the AKP's most notorious social media trolls (known as 'AK Trolls') to support him against Erdoğan • Advisors and journalists close to Davutoğlu were accused of supporting the restarting of negotiations with the PKK. • Davutoğlu and Erdoğan allegedly disagreed on whether arrested journalists
Can Dündar and
Erdem Gül should be tried while in custody. • Davutoğlu invited Arınç to a 'public opening' rally in
Manisa shortly before the June 2015 vote. • Davutoğlu's relations with Erdoğan further deteriorated after he visited the
Taraf newspaper, known to be critical of Erdoğan • Erdoğan allegedly blocked some of Davutoğlu's preferred appointments to high-ranking bureaucratic positions. • Davutoğlu allegedly angered Erdoğan when he claimed that the 1,100 academics arrested for signing a resolution calling for peace in the south-east of Turkey should not have been taken into custody. ==Aftermath==