Number of detainees in Istanbul-based operation rises to 32
The number of those detained in six cities in an Istanbul-based operation on Tuesday rose to 32.
The number of those detained in six cities in an Istanbul-based operation on Tuesday rose to 32.
Turkish police carried out dawn raids in six cities early this morning in the scope of an investigation launched by Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, in which 39 people face a detention warrant.
32 people have been taken into custody during the raids so far, including administrators and members of the Peoples' Democratic Congress (HDK), Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) and Greens and Left Future Party (Green Left Party) Youth Assembly. The detainees, accused of “being members of a terrorist organization”, have been taken to the Istanbul provincial police department.
The detainees are subject to a ban on access to lawyers for 24 hours and their file to a confidentiality order.
HUNDREDS DETAINED BEFORE ELECTIONS
The police raids took place less than two weeks before the May 14 elections.
Hundreds of people were detained last week. On April 30, 23 people including ESP Co-Chair Şahin Tümüklü, ETHA news agency editor Nadiye Gürbüz, members of the Socialist Youth Associations Federation (SGDF), Green Left Party MP candidate Burcu Ayyıldız, Müslüm Koyun and Meryem Yıldırım were detained in Istanbul and Eskişehir based police operations in 8 provinces as part of two separate files.
As part of an investigation launched by the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor's Office that targeted 49 people, police raids took place in 15 provinces on April 29. In these police raids, Dicle Müftüoğlu, co-chair of the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association (DFG), Sedat Yılmaz, an editor of the Mesopotamia News Agency (MA) and his wife Selma Yılmaz, and Sedat Yılmaz's sister Filiz Yılmaz were detained in Amed and Istanbul and taken to Ankara.
The detentions came after the Amed-based simultaneous operations that took place in 21 provinces on April 25. Detention warrants had been issued for more than 200 people, and 128 of them were detained. Numerous people, including journalists and lawyers, were then imprisoned.