Turkey’s broadcasting regulator imposes 99 sanctions, fines outlets $5.3 million in 2025
26.12.2025
By Turkish Minute
Source:https://www.turkishminute.com/2025/12/26/turkeys-
The Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK), Turkey’s broadcasting regulator, levied 99 sanctions in 2025 and fined broadcasters and digital platforms about $5.3 million, with the majority of penalties targeting news and political commentary programs critical of the government, the Stockholm Center for Freedom reported, citing Turkish media.
The sanctions included fines, temporary program suspensions and broadcast blackouts totaling 25 days. RTÜK also ordered the suspension of seven programs a total of 29 times on multiple broadcasters.
Tuncay Keser, a member of RTÜK, said the sanctions were imposed on national television stations, radio broadcasters and digital platforms for alleged violations of broadcasting principles.
RTÜK’s nine members are elected by parliament in proportion to party representation, giving the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its allies a majority on the council.
Keser described 2025 as “a difficult year for critical journalism,” saying news and commentary programs were “flooded with penalties.”
On digital platforms 10 titles were removed from Turkish catalogs on Netflix, Prime Video, MUBI, HBO Max, Disney XD and Spotify.
Sixty-
Of those 54 penalties, 45 were imposed on three broadcasters known for their critical coverage of government policies.
The pro-
NOW TV received eight sanctions in total, including three program suspensions, but did not face a broadcast blackout.
Smaller penalties were also imposed on other broadcasters, including Flash Haber, Star TV, Kanal D, TV8, Meltem TV and Sun RTV.
Press freedom organizations and journalist associations have criticized the sanctions as disproportionate and politically motivated. Earlier this year, several groups condemned RTÜK’s blackout of Tele 1, calling it an escalation of pressure on independent media.
The penalties come amid growing concerns over RTÜK’s independence, with critics accusing
the council of acting as a tool to silence dissenting voices and enforce a pro-
Turkey ranks 159th out of 180 countries in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index, published by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in May.