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Turkish prosecutors add charges of forging diploma against jailed Istanbul mayor

Turkish prosecutors add charges of forging diploma against jailed Istanbul mayor
Turkish prosecutors charged Istanbul's mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on Friday with falsifying his university diploma, a new case threatening more years in prison for President Tayyip Erdogan's main rival, already jailed pending corruption charges he denies. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 04 July 2025

Turkish prosecutors add charges of forging diploma against jailed Istanbul mayor

Turkish prosecutors add charges of forging diploma against jailed Istanbul mayor
  • Imamoglu denies the allegations against him, which his party says are orchestrated to protect Erdogan in power
  • His indictment over his diploma was reported by Milliyet newspaper

ANKARA: Turkish prosecutors charged Istanbul’s mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on Friday with falsifying his university diploma, a new case threatening more years in prison for President Tayyip Erdogan’s main rival, already jailed pending corruption charges he denies.

Imamoglu, at the center of a sprawling legal crackdown on the main opposition party, has been jailed since March 23 pending trial. He denies the allegations against him, which his party says are orchestrated to protect Erdogan in power.

His indictment over his diploma was reported by Milliyet newspaper, which said prosecutors were seeking eight years and nine months of prison time for the new charges. Reuters could not immediately obtain the document.

On March 18, Istanbul University said it had annulled Imamoglu’s diploma. He was detained a day later on the corruption charges, triggering Turkiye’s largest protests in a decade, and later jailed pending trial.

His detention has drawn sharp criticism from opposition parties and some foreign leaders, who call the case politically motivated and anti-democratic. The government denies the case is political.

Imamoglu is the main opposition Republican People’s Party’s presidential candidate in any future election. He won re-election as mayor in March last year by a wide margin against a candidate from Erdogan’s ruling AK Party.


More than 160,000 passengers pass through Syria’s Damascus airport in October

More than 160,000 passengers pass through Syria’s Damascus airport in October
Updated 3 sec ago

More than 160,000 passengers pass through Syria’s Damascus airport in October

More than 160,000 passengers pass through Syria’s Damascus airport in October
  • Currently, 15 airlines operate at the airport, and 4,964 visas were issued on arrival in October
  • Authorities handled 828 flights, including 801 passenger flights, 20 diplomatic flights and 7 charter flights

LONDON: The Syrian Civil Aviation Authority announced on Tuesday that 160,000 passengers passed through Damascus International Airport in October, as the country undergoes recovery after the civil war.

The authority recorded a total of 828 flights in October, which included 84,965 departures and 77,076 arrivals. Currently, 15 airlines operate at the airport, and 4,964 visas were issued on arrival during the same period.

The 828 flights included 801 passenger flights, 20 diplomatic flights and 7 charter flights.

The data emphasizes efforts to revitalize Syria’s air transport sector and enhance the airport’s services as part of a national plan to improve connectivity and operational capacity, according to the SANA news agency.

Damascus International Airport, located south of the capital, has seen a gradual recovery in flight activity following the fall of the Bashar Assad regime in December 2024.

The new authorities have signed several agreements to reconstruct services in Damascus, including a $4 billion investment project at the airport, signed with Qatar’s UCC Holding in August.

There are currently 15 airlines operating flights to Damascus, including those from the UAE, ºÚÁÏÉçÇø, Turkiye, Qatar, Jordan, Kuwait and Romania, among others. Damascus International Airport is the largest in the country and connects to other domestic destinations, such as Aleppo in the north.