
Turkey arrests more than 120 city hall members in opposition stronghold Izmir
The arrests, on charges of alleged corruption, came after a similar operation in opposition-run Istanbul on March 19 that saw the arrest of its popular mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, the main political rival of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In Izmir, Turkey 's third-largest city that the opposition has run for years, a former mayor and numerous "senior officials" were among those detained, Murat Bakan, the vice president of the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) wrote on X.
In total, some 157 arrest warrants were issued in the operation, local media reported.
"We are faced with a process similar to that in Istanbul," Bakan wrote, adding that Tunc Soyer, a former mayor, and Senol Aslanoglu, the party's regional president, were among those detained.
"These dawn arrests were not a legal obligation, but a clear political choice," Bakan wrote, saying that many of those detained had already been under investigation.
"If they had been called to testify, they would have done so," he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

LeMonde
an hour ago
- LeMonde
Turkey: New wave of arrests targets main opposition party
There was a sense of déjà vu in Turkey. After the publication of a political cartoon, which Turkish authorities said depicted the Prophet Muhammad, led to the arrest of four journalists on Monday, June 30, in Istanbul, authorities carried out a large-scale sweep in Izmir at dawn on Tuesday, July 1. Izmir, the country's third-largest city, is a bastion of the Republican People's Party (CHP), the main opposition party. 109 municipal officials affiliated with the CHP were arrested. The operation strongly recalled the events of March 19, when, at dawn, the CHP mayor of Istanbul, Ekrem Imamoglu – President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's main opponent – was taken into custody along with 104 elected officials, associates and staff members. With their hands cuffed behind their backs, the suspects were taken into custody by law enforcement officers. Scenes like these unfolded throughout Izmir, affecting everyone from top local leaders to municipal employees. All faced charges of corruption and misconduct. Among those newly detained were Tunç Soyer, former mayor of Izmir's metropolitan municipality (2019-2024), several former officials and the current provincial president of the CHP, Senol Aslanoglu.
LeMonde
6 hours ago
- LeMonde
PKK accuses Turkish government of undermining disarmament effort
The Kurdish PKK group on Wednesday, July 2 said that some elements of the Turkish government are seeking to undermine a historic disarmament process meant to put an end to decades of conflict. The PKK, or Kurdistan Workers' Party, in May declared an end to its armed conflict and was expected to hold a series of ceremonies to destroy its weapons. But Mustafa Karasu, one of the group's founders and top leaders, told a Kurdish-linked television station that "a group at the heart of the state is seeking to sabotage the process". "We are ready, but it is the (Turkish) government that has not taken the needed steps," he said. Karasu cited continued Turkish military strikes on PKK positions in northern Irak as well as the lack of improvement in the prison conditions of the PKK's founder Abdullah Ocalan. Ocalan, now 76, has been held at the Imrali island jail since 1999. In February, he called on the PKK to lay down its weapons after decades of conflict with the Turkish state that has left at least 45,000 people dead. "Some friends have gone to Imrali, but it's not enough. The isolation has lasted for 26 years," despite some adjustments, Karasu said. "The situation of our leader affects the process and slows it down," he said. Karasu did not confirm if any disarmament ceremonies were still planned. "We want the process to continue and flourish. But the situation leads us to observe a blockage. The government's attitude is the cause," he said.


France 24
11 hours ago
- France 24
Turkey detains satirical magazine staff over cartoon accused of insulting the Prophet Mohammed
Four staff members at satirical Turkish magazine LeMan have been remanded in custody over claims that they published a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed, the government said on Wednesday. The four, who deny the accusations, were arrested as part of a probe by prosecutors in Istanbul into what Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc called the "disrespectful drawing". "An arrest warrant has been issued for two suspects currently abroad," he added on X. The publication of the cartoon and arrests of staff at the opposition magazine led to clashes in Istanbul on Monday night. News site T24 published the police deposition of cartoonist Dogan Pehlevan in which he said that he wanted "to talk about peace in this drawing" and condemned "provocateurs". "I have been drawing in Turkey for many years. The first rule you learn is not to address religious issues and not to mock religion," he added. "I have always adhered to this principle. I reject the accusations levelled against me." The drawing in question shows two characters meeting in the sky above a city devastated by bombs. One is named Muhammad and the other Musa. "I just wanted to highlight the absurdity of war, to show that people can get along but do you have to be dead to realise that? That's my only message," he added. On Monday evening, a favourite haunt of LeMan staff in the Istiklal district of Istanbul was attacked. It escalated into a pitched battle between about 300 people, including people defending the magazine and furious at the arrests. On Tuesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the cartoon a "vile provocation" and a "hate crime" whose authors will have to answer for "disrespecting the prophet". Despite a ban, some 300 people also gathered around Taksim Mosque in central Istanbul, shouting "don't forget Charlie Hebdo", referring to a deadly Islamist militant attack on the French magazine in 2015. LeMan's editor-in-chief Tuncay Akgun told AFP that the drawing in question "has nothing to do with the Prophet Mohammed", adding: "We would never take such a risk." "The character is a Muslim killed in Gaza... He was called Mohammed (like) more than 200 million people in the Muslim world," he said.