Dubai Telegraph - 'Living in dictatorship': Istanbul mayor's arrest sparks anger

EUR -
AED 3.997704
AFN 77.152062
ALL 98.99602
AMD 426.191821
ANG 1.960969
AOA 994.268841
ARS 1163.246348
AUD 1.719133
AWG 1.961873
AZN 1.853423
BAM 1.950804
BBD 2.196874
BDT 132.201437
BGN 1.952638
BHD 0.410282
BIF 3224.383229
BMD 1.088418
BND 1.450379
BOB 7.518538
BRL 6.157164
BSD 1.088014
BTN 93.897962
BWP 14.80212
BYN 3.560765
BYR 21332.98504
BZD 2.185563
CAD 1.559022
CDF 3129.200792
CHF 0.958695
CLF 0.026021
CLP 998.579687
CNY 7.866867
CNH 7.872617
COP 4491.083139
CRC 542.301222
CUC 1.088418
CUP 28.843067
CVE 109.983337
CZK 24.99227
DJF 193.748477
DKK 7.459057
DOP 68.354946
DZD 145.640017
EGP 55.124979
ERN 16.326264
ETB 143.255144
FJD 2.490193
FKP 0.838144
GBP 0.839442
GEL 3.042104
GGP 0.838144
GHS 16.864346
GIP 0.838144
GMD 77.826231
GNF 9408.904156
GTQ 8.383607
GYD 227.632858
HKD 8.456711
HNL 27.835714
HRK 7.53218
HTG 142.655974
HUF 398.656893
IDR 17989.855948
ILS 3.989264
IMP 0.838144
INR 93.939585
IQD 1425.349734
IRR 45822.380663
ISK 145.118231
JEP 0.838144
JMD 170.613066
JOD 0.771802
JPY 163.143459
KES 140.74317
KGS 93.178673
KHR 4355.824889
KMF 489.434163
KPW 979.501541
KRW 1590.591381
KWD 0.335254
KYD 0.906657
KZT 548.066352
LAK 23556.534391
LBP 97486.653382
LKR 322.498538
LRD 217.608714
LSL 19.749404
LTL 3.213815
LVL 0.658373
LYD 5.235592
MAD 10.486046
MDL 19.533374
MGA 5067.928105
MKD 61.522321
MMK 2284.631474
MNT 3784.530025
MOP 8.707859
MRU 43.240052
MUR 48.815996
MVR 16.772691
MWK 1886.616447
MXN 21.761963
MYR 4.828244
MZN 69.554303
NAD 19.749223
NGN 1677.229686
NIO 40.037466
NOK 11.510843
NPR 150.235562
NZD 1.881988
OMR 0.419033
PAB 1.087869
PEN 3.944199
PGK 4.477615
PHP 62.227064
PKR 304.876126
PLN 4.18062
PYG 8680.768882
QAR 3.966841
RON 4.977622
RSD 117.206254
RUB 91.425419
RWF 1543.917716
SAR 4.082447
SBD 9.166638
SCR 15.639037
SDG 654.138857
SEK 11.015981
SGD 1.451476
SHP 0.855325
SLE 24.848568
SLL 22823.574127
SOS 621.804725
SRD 39.632005
STD 22528.046898
SVC 9.520618
SYP 14151.473229
SZL 19.727117
THB 36.648114
TJS 11.892226
TMT 3.820346
TND 3.352115
TOP 2.549187
TRY 41.230458
TTD 7.381959
TWD 35.959688
TZS 2882.104793
UAH 45.219894
UGX 3988.784874
USD 1.088418
UYU 45.802701
UZS 14064.980123
VES 72.602398
VND 27803.627696
VUV 133.725714
WST 3.048737
XAF 654.278412
XAG 0.032401
XAU 0.000359
XCD 2.941503
XDR 0.811849
XOF 654.28141
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.967608
ZAR 19.742041
ZMK 9797.063525
ZMW 31.30466
ZWL 350.470024
  • CMSC

    0.0050

    23.225

    +0.02%

  • JRI

    0.0050

    12.985

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.0200

    99.36

    +0.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.0180

    23.372

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    -0.4000

    63.41

    -0.63%

  • GSK

    -1.0700

    39.32

    -2.72%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    10.88

    -0.46%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.7

    +0.4%

  • RIO

    -0.5900

    63.55

    -0.93%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    23.39

    -1.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.0900

    10.6

    +0.85%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    9.73

    -1.13%

  • RELX

    0.1850

    49.175

    +0.38%

  • AZN

    -0.8500

    76.22

    -1.12%

  • BP

    0.0850

    34.305

    +0.25%

  • BTI

    -0.0900

    41.17

    -0.22%

'Living in dictatorship': Istanbul mayor's arrest sparks anger
'Living in dictatorship': Istanbul mayor's arrest sparks anger / Photo: Yasin AKGUL - AFP

'Living in dictatorship': Istanbul mayor's arrest sparks anger

"We're living in a dictatorship," said Kuzey, an Istanbul shopkeeper after police detained the city's popular opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu on corruption allegations.

Text size:

The early morning detention of Imamoglu on graft charges was purely political, Kuzey said as he opened his shop near Taksim Square.

The move came days before Imamoglu, the main political rival of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was formally named the opposition candidate for the 2028 race.

"Whenever this guy and his dirty team see someone strong, they panic and do something illegal to him," said this 40-something dressed in jeans and a black top, referring to Erdogan and the AKP who have been in power since 2003.

"But we Turks are a strong people, we're used to fighting these things," he said as large numbers of police headed for Taksim Square which was fenced off with metal barricades.

Four riot-control trucks were in place, all armed with water canon, to prevent any protest at the huge square which was the epicentre of huge demonstrations against Erdogan in 2013, when he was prime minister.

Many people were reluctant to comment on the fast-moving events, and those that did, refused to give more than their first name.

"This is very bad and I don't know what will happen next. You never know what they'll do," said a passerby called Mustafa. "I'm angry but what can we do?"

In another nearby street, a pensioner in a grey beret also expressed dismay over the detention of Imamoglu and more than 100 of his associates, many of them members of the main opposition CHP.

"I am sad for my country, it shouldn't be like this," he told AFP, refusing to give his name.

- 'Coups used to be by soldiers' -

In front of the police headquarters where the mayor was taken, several hundred people gathered to protest near the police barriers, shouting: "Imamoglu, you're not alone!"

"Government, resign!" they yelled.

"One day, the AKP will have to give an accounting to the people."

On Istiklal, the main pedestrianised shopping artery, there was turmoil at currency exhange offices that serve millions of tourists every year, with news of the arrest sending the Turkish lira to historic lows against the dollar and the euro.

In front of one of them, 63-year-old Hasan Yildiz was wide-eyed about the arrest, agreeing it was little more than a "coup" against the opposition.

The move came just days before the CHP was to have formally named Imamoglu their candidate for the 2028 presidential election.

"In the past, it was the soldiers who carried out coups. Today it's the politicians," Yildiz said, indifferent to the police car parked nearby.

"Foreign investors are not going to invest in Turkey any more. Who would want to invest in a country without justice or rule of law?" he wondered.

- 'Prices will go up' -

Another bypasser called Emre, who works nearby, said the upheaval would mean more economic pain for regular people.

"I'm not surprised by anything any more. The exchange rate will soon be 50 liras to the euro," he told AFP of a rate which soared a historic high of 42 liras to the euro after his arrest.

"And it will be reflected in the cost bread and the cost of everything. All because of the unjust actions of one man," he said.

"I am furious," admitted Zeynep Kara, 68, saying the reason for Imamoglu's arrest was "obvious" -- to stop him from running -- with the charges of corruption a mere "pretext" to justify it.

"The situation is not going to get any better," she said.

T.Jamil--DT