Arrested Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu has refuted “terrorism” charges brought against him, according to a court document seen by the Reuters news agency
“I see today during my interrogation that I and my colleagues are faced with unimaginable accusations and slanders,” Imamoglu said Saturday in his defence during a hearing, the document showed.
Later on Saturday, Imamoglu arrived at the Caglayan courthouse, where he was to be questioned by prosecutors, a spokesman for city hall said. Imamoglu will appear in court on Sunday as a judge is expected to decide whether to jail or release him.
The mayor, a key opposition figure and potential challenger to longtime President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was detained on Wednesday by the government for alleged corruption and “terrorism”.
His detention came four days before his Republican People’s Party (CHP) planned to name him as its 2028 presidential candidate.
Erdogan on Saturday accused the CHP’s leadership of turning the party “into an apparatus to absolve a handful of municipal robbers who have become blinded by money.”
He also accused it of “doing everything to disturb the public peace, to polarize the nation.”
Imamoglu’s arrest has sparked a wave of protests that have spread within 48 hours to more than two-thirds of Turkiye’s 81 provinces, even including strongholds of Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party, such as the central area of Konya and Trabzon and Rize on the Black Sea.
Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc told reporters this week that the arrests had nothing to do with the government.
“Linking investigations and cases initiated by the judiciary to our President is, at best, presumptuous and inappropriate,” he added.
Erdogan’s communications directorate has also said the presidency would continue to defend him against what it called an “irrational smear campaign”.
Despite a ban on protests and a heavy police presence, huge crowds of protesters have taken to the streets.
Turkiye saw a fourth straight night of protests on Saturday.
Erdogan does still retain support in many parts of the country that trusts the government due to the country’s divisive history and current polarized environment.
Imamoglu commended the protests and said in a post on X on Saturday that they were aimed at protecting “democracy” as an “inspiration” to the world.
Turkish police have cracked down on protesters.
Officials announced 343 people have been arrested in the demonstrations so far, which have seen hundreds of thousands of people protest in Turkiye’s biggest cities in a massive show of defiance.
On Saturday, detention warrants were issued for 94 suspects accused of posting “provocative” calls to protest and create public “panic”, the Turkish news agency Anadolu quoted the Istanbul chief public prosecutor’s office as saying.
Police carried out simultaneous raids, detaining 56 of the suspects, and are searching for the 38 others, Anadolu reported, adding that authorities have also seized illegal drugs during searches of the suspects’ homes.
The investigation against İmamoglu is part of a sweeping probe involving 106 suspects over corruption and “terror” allegations.
A powerful flood tore through the village of Darbdarreh in Kermanshah Province, western Iran, following…
Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian, currently on a visit to East Azarbaijan Province, made a stop…
Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said Tehran is preparing an official response to a…
A bipartisan group of U.S. senators is urging the administration of President Donald Trump to…
Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi has emphasized the strategic significance of the South Caucasus…
Russian propaganda is successfully influencing some people in the White House, Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky…