Turkey detains 38 people in 2 days of operations targeting 3 main opposition-run
municipalities
10.04.2026
By Turkish Minute
Source:https://www.turkishminute.com/2026/04/10/turkey-detains-38-people-in-2-days-of-operations-targeting-3-main-opposition-run-municipalities/
Turkish authorities detained at least 38 people, including municipal officials and
a mayor, over the course of two days in operations targeting three opposition-run
municipalities, in an expanding crackdown on the country’s main opposition Republican
People’s Party (CHP), the Stockholm Center for Freedom reported.
On Friday prosecutors in the southern city of Mersin ordered the detention of some
31 people in an investigation into alleged corruption in the Yenişehir district municipality.
The operation targeted senior municipal figures, including deputy mayors, department
heads and company representatives, over allegations of bribery, bid-rigging and misconduct
in public tenders, according to the Birgün daily. Police carried out coordinated
raids on residences and municipal offices and seized documents and digital materials.
The investigation in Yenişehir follows a broader corruption probe launched last month
into the Mersin Metropolitan Municipality, also run by the CHP. In that case authorities
detained several municipal officials, including senior staff, over allegations including
bribery, document falsification, fraud and money laundering, and seized multiple
properties, vehicles and other assets.
Also on Friday, authorities in the northwestern city of Bolu detained three people,
including Deputy Mayor Leyla Beykoz and a city council member, as part of a separate
investigation into alleged misconduct that has already led to the arrest and suspension
of Mayor Tanju Özcan, a member of the CHP.
Özcan was detained in late February along with more than a dozen suspects in a probe
into alleged extortion linked to municipal dealings with private businesses. He was
later jailed pending trial and suspended from office, with prosecutors accusing municipal
officials of coercive practices tied to contracts and inspections.
On Thursday, authorities in the western province of İzmir detained four people, including
Bornova Mayor Ömer Eşki, as part of an investigation into alleged fraud and falsification
of official documents.
The suspects were referred to court after questioning but were released on Friday
under judicial supervision, with the investigation continuing. The case involves
allegations that a municipal employee received a salary without performing work.
The latest detentions come amid an intensifying legal campaign against the CHP following
its sweeping victory in the March 2024 local elections, when the party won control
of many major cities.
Since then, prosecutors have launched a series of investigations targeting opposition
mayors and municipal officials, often on corruption-related charges that critics
say are politically motivated. Courts have also invalidated CHP party congress results
and replaced elected party officials with court-appointed administrators in multiple
cities.
The most prominent case involves İstanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu, who was detained
on March 19, 2025, days before CHP members selected him as their presidential candidate
for a future election. He faces charges including leading a criminal organization,
embezzlement, bid-rigging, bribery and espionage in an indictment that prosecutors
say documents a decade-long criminal enterprise within the İstanbul Metropolitan
Municipality.
İmamoğlu, who first won the İstanbul mayoralty in 2019 after defeating President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s party in a historic upset, is widely regarded as the opposition’s
strongest potential challenger to Erdoğan in the presidential election scheduled
for 2028.
Opposition leaders say the legal cases are part of a broader strategy to weaken the
CHP’s local power base and pressure its officials to defect to the ruling party.
Over 60 opposition mayors have switched allegiance to the ruling Justice and Development
Party (AKP) over the past two years, a trend critics attribute to political pressure
and intimidation.