ISTANBUL: Turkish police detained Istanbul’s powerful Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on Wednesday in connection with two investigations into graft and “supporting terror,” a move that the main opposition party slammed as a politically-motivated “coup”.
Imamoglu is President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s main political rival and his detention came just days before he was to be named the candidate of the main opposition party CHP in the 2028 presidential election.
Widely seen as the strongest challenger to Erdogan, Imamoglu has been targeted by a growing number of what critics say are spurious legal investigations. Hundreds of police joined the pre-dawn raid on his home, Imamoglu said on X, with the government saying his detention was linked to a corruption probe and another for “helping a terror organisation.”
Supporters of Imamoglu storm the streets slamming govt
Shortly afterwards, Turkiye briefly blocked access to social networks, with police fanning out around City Hall and closing off Taksim Square, banning all protests for four days. “What has happened is an attempted coup,” railed CHP leader Ozgur Ozel in a speech at City Hall.
“Ekrem Imamoglu’s freedom to be a candidate is not being taken away, it is this nation’s freedom to elect him that is being taken away.” His words were echoed by the mayor’s wife, Dr Dilek Kaya Imamoglu.
“This is a targeted political operation aimed at eliminating Turkiye’s future president. This is a direct blow to the nation, and we will fight,” she vowed.
Several European mayors signed a statement denouncing his detention, saying it “not only poses a threat to individual rights but also challenges the fabric of democratic governance in the region.” Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said she was “shocked” to learn of the raid, saying it was “a new step in the Erdogan regime’s crackdown on opposition mayors” and demanding he be released immediately”.
The move against Imamoglu drew a sharp condemnation from Berlin, with the foreign ministry saying it was a “serious setback for democracy”.
Anger on the streets
There was also anger on the streets. “We’re living in a dictatorship!” angrily said a shopkeeper in his 40s called Kuzey.
“Whenever this guy and his dirty team see someone strong, they panic and do something illegal,” he said, referring to Erdogan and the AKP who have been in power since 2003. “In the past, it was soldiers who carried out coups. Today it’s the politicians,” sighed 63-year-old Hasan Yildiz.
Despite the protest ban, 300 people rallied outside the police station where the mayor was taken in Fatih district, yelling: “Imamoglu, you are not alone!” and “Government resign!” Nearby, police fired teargas to disperse some 400 students protesting outside Istanbul University over its decision to revoke Imamoglu’s degree.
The pre-dawn raid on Imamoglu’s home sparked chaos on the country’s financial markets, with the Turkish lira falling 14.5 per cent against the dollar, and the benchmark BIST 100 shedding 7.02pc.
Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said Imamoglu was one of seven people being investigated for the “alleged crime of aiding and abetting a terrorist organisation” — a reference to the banned Kurdish PKK group.
Published in Dawn, March 20th, 2025