Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor

Update Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor
Turkish authorities on Tuesday detained a former mayor and dozens of municipality officials in the western city of Izmir over alleged corruption, extending a crackdown against the country’s main opposition party. (AP/File)
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Updated 01 July 2025

Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor

Turkiye detains 120 opposition officials including former mayor
  • Police detained 120 officials from the opposition Republican People’s Party, including former Izmir Mayor Tunc Soyer
  • The Izmir Public Prosecutor’s Office issued arrest warrants against 157 officials

ANKARA: Turkish authorities on Tuesday detained a former mayor and dozens of municipality officials in the western city of Izmir over alleged corruption, extending a crackdown against the country’s main opposition party.

Police detained 120 officials from the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, including former Izmir Mayor Tunc Soyer and the party’s provincial leader Senol Aslanoglu, state-run Anadolu Agency said.

In total, the Izmir Public Prosecutor’s Office issued arrest warrants against 157 officials as part of an investigation into alleged rigging of municipality tenders and fraud, it added.

Officials from CHP-controlled municipalities in Istanbul and elsewhere have faced waves of arrests this year, including Istanbul’s Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu who was arrested in March over allegations of corruption. His arrest triggered the largest street protests Turkiye has seen in more than a decade.

Imamoglu is regarded as the main challenger to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s 22-year rule and was officially nominated as his party’s presidential candidate following his imprisonment. Turkiye’s next election is due in 2028 but could come sooner.

Many people in Turkiye consider the cases to be politically driven, according to opinion polls. But Erdogan’s government insists the courts are impartial and free from political involvement.

The crackdown comes a year after the CHP made significant gains in local elections.


Turkiye’s Erdogan heralds ‘new phase’ in PKK peace process

Turkiye’s Erdogan heralds ‘new phase’ in PKK peace process
Updated 49 min 43 sec ago

Turkiye’s Erdogan heralds ‘new phase’ in PKK peace process

Turkiye’s Erdogan heralds ‘new phase’ in PKK peace process
  • The comments could hint at possible engagement with PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been jailed since 1999
  • Ocalan has played a key role urging his militant group to disarm and dissolve, steps it announced earlier this year

ANKARA: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that Turkiye had entered a “new phase” in efforts to end Kurdish militant violence and signaled he was open to the idea of jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan addressing lawmakers.

Erdogan said he held “very constructive” talks last week with senior pro-Kurdish DEM Party leaders – who have urged the idea of Ocalan addressing a parliamentary commission on PKK disarmament – and he urged all actors to contribute.

“It appears we have reached a new crossroads on the path toward a Turkiye free of terrorism,” Erdogan told his ruling AK Party lawmakers. “Everyone needs to step up and do their part.”

“We consider it extremely valuable that ... all relevant parties are heard without leaving anyone out, and that different opinions — even if contrary — are expressed,” he said.

The comments could hint at possible engagement with Ocalan, who has been jailed since 1999 but has played a key role urging his militant Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to disarm and dissolve, steps it announced earlier this year.

DEM has said the commission, on which it sits with other parties, should be allowed to engage Ocalan in prison given he remains central to Kurdish public opinion and was involved in previous peace efforts.

Erdogan’s government has not confirmed any such step.

The PKK launched its insurgency in 1984. A previous peace initiative collapsed in 2015, unleashing renewed bloodshed in Turkiye’s southeast. The government has not publicly detailed the framework of the current effort.

Erdogan’s comments came a day after his nationalist ally Devlet Bahceli said it “would be beneficial” to release Selahattin Demirtas, the former pro-Kurdish party leader jailed since 2016.

Bahceli, long hostile to Kurdish political demands, effectively launched the peace process with the PKK when he floated the idea a year ago.

“With a bit more courage and effort, and with God’s permission, we will successfully conclude this process,” Erdogan said.