Turkey blocks dozens of news reports on corruption and investigations
13.01.2026
By Turkish minute
Source:https://stockholmcf.org/turkey-
Turkey’s telecommunications authority has blocked dozens of articles on corruption as well as politically sensitive reporting on the independent Kısa Dalga news website.
According to Kısa Dalga, the blocks were ordered by Turkey’s Information and Communication
Technologies Authority (BTK), which told the news outlet to remove or disable access
to articles ranging from reports on money laundering and corruption allegations to
investigations linked to Istanbul’s main opposition-
Kısa Dalga said the restrictions cut off public access to reporting on matters of significant public interest, including corruption, the use of state power and the activities of politically connected business and political figures.
Among the blocked material were reports and columns about a high-
Korkmaz is a controversial business figure who has faced money-
Other blocked stories focused on an investigation involving the Istanbul Municipality, which is run by the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP). Those articles included reporting on statements by former ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) lawmaker Şamil Tayyar about who was being targeted in the probe.
Turkey has become one of the world’s most frequent users of court-
In the first seven months of 2025 alone, 3,330 URLs linked to 1,306 pieces of online content were blocked.
The country’s Constitutional Court has repeatedly ruled that this legal framework violates freedom of expression and press freedom. In a 2024 decision the court struck down a provision that allowed news and online content to be blocked on the grounds that it harmed an individual’s reputation or private life, saying the law was too vague and enabled arbitrary censorship.
In a 2021 ruling the court also found that blocking news reports under the same provision violated free expression and required legislative change. The court has also stripped the head of the BTK of the authority to independently order content removals and access blocks.