logo
Erdogan Crackdown Continues With 500 Opposition Figures Arrested In 'Octopus' Probe

Erdogan Crackdown Continues With 500 Opposition Figures Arrested In 'Octopus' Probe

Gulf Insider12-07-2025
Turkish authorities have detained more than 500 members and officials of the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) since October 2024 in an intensifying crackdown that has exclusively targeted municipalities held by the secularist party, according to a Reuters review of legal filings and state disclosures published on Thursday.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has defended the campaign as an effort to dismantle a corrupt 'octopus' network with arms stretching 'to other parts of Turkiye and abroad.'
His office has not responded to requests for comment on accusations of political interference or selective prosecution.
The probe initially focused on Istanbul but has since spread to CHP-run cities including Izmir, Adana, Antalya, and Adiyaman – territories seized from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in last year's municipal elections.
More than 220 individuals have been imprisoned or placed under house arrest, with 202 detained in the past week alone.
Among those jailed is Ekrem Imamoglu, mayor of Istanbul and Erdogan's leading political rival, who was arrested in March on corruption charges he denies.
A 121-page police transcript reviewed by Reuters alleges that Imamoglu's phone repeatedly connected to the same cell tower as individuals accused of bribery, to which he responded that his home was located nearby. Prosecutors have yet to issue indictments.
Lawyers and party officials say the arrests lack a legal foundation. Mehmet Pehlivan, Imamoglu's lawyer, who was also jailed, said the probe attempts 'for the first time to criminalize the right to practice law.'
Former AKP minister Ertugrul Gunay described the campaign as a 'tool for political attrition,' warning it reflects panic within Erdogan's camp over future elections. CHP Chairman Ozgur Ozel called it 'a coup against Ataturk's party,' prompting a separate investigation against him for allegedly insulting the president.
Three CHP mayors – Zeydan Karalar of Adana, Muhittin Bocek of Antalya, and Abdurrahman Tutdere of Adiyaman – were arrested on 5 July in what the party described as a 'political operation.' Their arrests followed the detention of over 120 individuals in Izmir.
Ankara Mayor Mansur Yavas responded on X, saying, 'In a system where the law is bent and twisted according to politics … no one should expect us to trust the rule of law or believe in justice.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Erdogan tells Putin Turkey backs Ukraine peace talks involving 'all parties': presidency
Erdogan tells Putin Turkey backs Ukraine peace talks involving 'all parties': presidency

Daily Tribune

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Tribune

Erdogan tells Putin Turkey backs Ukraine peace talks involving 'all parties': presidency

TDT | Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday informed his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin by phone that Turkey would support a process involving "all parties" for peace in Ukraine, the Turkish presidency said. Erdogan told Putin that "Turkey has sincerely strived for a just peace since the beginning of the war, and in this context, supports approaches aimed at establishing lasting peace with the participation of all parties," his office said in a statement.

Three U.S. Missile Destroyers Sail Toward Venezuela
Three U.S. Missile Destroyers Sail Toward Venezuela

Gulf Insider

time19 hours ago

  • Gulf Insider

Three U.S. Missile Destroyers Sail Toward Venezuela

More details are emerging about President Trump's latest show of force in Latin America aimed at narco-terrorist cartels fueling America's drug crisis, which claims 100,000 lives a year. According to Reuters, three Aegis destroyers, surveillance aircraft, and an attack submarine are being deployed to international waters off Venezuela. Sources close to the media outlet say 4,000 sailors and Marines will support the large force projection mission that includes three U.S. Aegis guided-missile destroyers (USS Gravely, USS Jason Dunham, and USS Sampson), along with P-8 surveillance planes, other warships, and at least one attack submarine. The operation will run for several months and focus on enhancing hemispheric defense to dismantle narco-terrorist cartels' command and control nodes that funnel drugs into the U.S. Also, this force projection is a signal to Beijing to limit Chinese activity in the region, particularly around critical infrastructure and trade chokepoints. The Trump administration has put Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel and Venezuela's Tren de Aragua on notice, classifying them as foreign terrorist organizations. The broader understanding is that this is all a part of hemispheric defense. Source: Heritage Foundation The deployment also signals to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government that Washington is not playing around. Maduro told the nation on Monday that his country will 'defend our seas, our skies and our lands.' He hinted at what he called 'the outlandish, bizarre threat of a declining empire.' On Tuesday, Mao Ning, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said combating drugs is a shared responsibility around the world: 'But we hope that major countries should play the role responsibly, maintain regional peace and stability, and properly handle the issue together with relevant countries.' Also read: Refugees In Austria Accused Of Failing German Courses To Stay On Benefits And Out Of Work

Qatar Threatens Natural Gas Embargo Against The EU
Qatar Threatens Natural Gas Embargo Against The EU

Gulf Insider

time08-08-2025

  • Gulf Insider

Qatar Threatens Natural Gas Embargo Against The EU

Qatari Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi sent a letter to the Belgian government in May, Reuters reported, warning may stop exporting liquefied natural gas to the European Union in response to the European corporate sustainability due diligence directive, which entered into force on July 25. The CSDDD requires large companies to remedy environmental harm and human rights concerns (such as forced labor) in their supply chains or incur fines. The rules apply to both EU and non-EU companies with a yearly turnover greater than €450 million. Notably, the rules will be implemented gradually through 2029 based on company size. Qatari outrage over the directive reflects the country's reliance on fossil fuel exports and widely reported exploitation of foreign workers. In the above-mentioned letter to Belgium's government, Al-Kaabi, who is also President and CEO and Deputy Chairman of state-owned QatarEnergy, wrote that if 'further changes are not made to CSDDD, the State of Qatar and QatarEnergy will have no choice but to seriously consider alternative markets outside of the EU for our LNG and other products.' His letter questioned the European directive's climate goals, affirming that Doha has no plans to achieve net zero emissions anytime soon. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Qatar is one of the world's top LNG exporters, exported about 9.3 billion cubic feet per day of LNG through the Strait of Hormuz in 2024. With new LNG pipelines opening up in Syria, plus increasingly warm relations between Qatar and Pakistan, Qatar has other options for LNG export flows. Europeans have few equally affordable options. To meet European needs for gas without having to rely on Russia or Qatar, EU countries may look to buying more LNG from the U.S. or revisit local nuclear energy read: 'Chat Control' – EU Proposal To Scan All Private Messages Gains Momentum

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store