Turkey detains editor of opposition paper Cumhuriyet
TURKISH police detained the editor-in-chief of the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet yesterday, t he latest move against the daily that has published revelations embarrassing for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government.
The newspaper said a dozen staff members were detained in early morning raids as part of a widening crackdown against opposition media which has seen dozens of journalists held.
The detentions come after Turkish authorities fired more than 10,000 civil servants at the weekend and closed 15 proKurdish and other media outlets, the latest purge since the July coup bid.
Cumhuriyet editor Murat Sabuncu was detained and police were hunting for its exec- utive board chairman Akin Atalay, the official news agency Anadolu said.
The Istanbul prosecutor said an investigation had been launched into allegations the paper’s output was “legitimising” the attempted putsch.
Demonstrators at the paper’s headquarters waved copies of yesterday’s edition which bore t he headline Coup against opposition.
Cumhuriyet said an arrest warrant was also issued for its for mer editor-in-chief Can Dundar who was sentenced to jail in May for allegedly revealing state secrets in a high-profile case that triggered alarm about the state of press freedom in Turkey.
The newspaper had accused the government of seeking to illicitly deliver arms bound for Islamist rebels in Syria. Erdogan had warned Dundar he would “pay a heavy price”.
Dundar is now believed to be in Germany after he was freed earlier this year pending an appeal.
The International Press Institute said on Twitter an arrest warrant was issued for one of the rights group’s board members, Kadri Gursel, who also wrote for the daily.
The latest detentions came as the authorities pressed on with a massive crackdown over a failed bid to overthrow Erdogan by a rogue military faction.
Turkey has been under a state of emergency since the failed putsch blamed on exiled Turkish Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen.
The Istanbul prosecutor said in a statement quoted by Turkish media that the newspaper and its owner the Cumhuriyet Foundation were being investigated over links to the outlawed KurdistanWorkers’ Party (PKK) and the Gulen movement.
The probe was looking at whether Cumhuriyet committed crimes on behalf of the two “terror organisations”, the prosecutor said.
A crowd of up to 70 people, including journalists and members of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) gathered outside Cumhuriyet’s headquarters in Istanbul to protest at the detentions.
Carrying copies of the newspaper, demonstrators shouted: “The day will come, AKP will be brought to account,” referring to Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party.
“A free media cannot be silenced,” they chanted as riot police and a truck loaded with water cannon arrived.
Monday’s edition of the paper criticised the government’s weekend announcement of the closure of several media outlets as well as the suspension of university rector elections.
Erdogan is set to pick the winners from a pool of candidates selected by the nation’s education authority. Cumhuriyet