Faisal Chaudhry’s viral one-liner on G for Gharidah steals the show A digital dream falters: Nukta cuts 37 jobs in Pakistan after only one year Pulitzer Center offers global grants for in-depth journalism CPJ urges probe after journalist Rana Ayyub receives death threats in India Talat Hussain says offensive viral clip was edited out, not aired on Samaa TV Moldovan journalist Mariana Rață receives death threat after interview PFUJ recalls November 3, 2007 emergency as Pakistan’s darkest day Indonesia’s agriculture minister faces backlash over lawsuit against Tempo All About Macau to cease print and online operations amid mounting pressure PFUJ calls for end to Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists
Journalism Pakistan
Journalism Pakistan

Turkey targets opposition newspaper over suspected coup links

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published 8 years ago

Join our WhatsApp channel

Turkey targets opposition newspaper over suspected coup links

ISTANBUL - Turkish authorities have issued arrest warrants for the owner and three employees of an opposition newspaper, a police source and the paper said Friday, part of a crackdown on media that has alarmed rights groups and Turkey's Western allies.

The four are accused of committing crimes on behalf of the network of U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, they said. Ankara accuses Gulen of masterminding last July's failed coup against President Tayyip Erdogan, a charge he denies.

Turkish police carried out searches at the homes of the owner and the three employees of Sozcu newspaper, which is fiercely critical of Erdogan and his AK Party, and also detained the paper's internet editor and its correspondent for the Aegean province of Izmir, the police source and the paper said.

The paper's owner is currently abroad, he added.

The state-run Anadolu news agency said the charges against the four suspects included planning "the assassination of the president and physical assault" and "armed rebellion against the government of the Turkish Republic".

It added that a story and photographs by the paper revealing where Erdogan was spending his vacation a day before the coup and a crossword puzzle with the president's name hidden were specifically checked as part of the investigation.

Metin Yilmaz, editor-in-chief of the secularist, nationalist Sozcu, confirmed the police raids but denied the accusations, saying his paper had long criticized Gulen and his supporters.

"The only thing we do is journalism. But doing that in this country is a crime in itself," he said in a statement published on the paper's website. "Writing the truth, criticizing and doing stories are all crimes."

The investigation drew sharp criticism from Turkey's main opposition party CHP. Its leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, said the inquiry was "unacceptable", while senior CHP lawmaker Ozgur Ozel said it aimed to silence all dissent.

Since the failed coup, Turkish authorities have shut more than 130 media outlets and a press union says more than 150 journalists have been jailed, raising concerns about media freedom in a country that aspires to join the European Union.

The arrest warrants for Sozcu came days after a court jailed the online editor of another opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet, pending trial, on a charge of spreading terrorist propaganda.

Around a dozen journalists from the paper, long a pillar of Turkey's old secularist establishment, are already in jail facing sentences of up to 43 years in prison, accused of supporting Gulen's network.

Turkey has also suspended or dismissed more than 150,000 judges, teachers, police and civil servants and has arrested nearly 50,000 others suspected of links to the Gulen movement.

Turkish officials say the crackdown is necessary because the Gulen movement had set up a "state within a state" that threatened national security. They point to the gravity of last July's coup, when rogue troops commandeered warplanes to bomb parliament and used tanks to kill 240 people.

But Erdogan's critics in Turkey and abroad say he is using the coup to purge opponents and muzzle dissent. Last month he narrowly won a referendum that grants him sweeping new powers. - Reuters/Image: Gursel Tekin, a lawmaker from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) holds a print copy of Sozcu daily newspaper as they visit the publication's headquarters in Istanbul May 19, 2017. - Reuters/Ziya Koseoglu

Read Next

Newsroom
Pulitzer Center offers global grants for in-depth journalism

Pulitzer Center offers global grants for in-depth journalism

 November 05, 2025 The Pulitzer Center is offering global reporting grants for journalists worldwide, funding high-impact projects on underreported issues with rolling applications in 2025.


CPJ urges probe after journalist Rana Ayyub receives death threats in India

CPJ urges probe after journalist Rana Ayyub receives death threats in India

 November 04, 2025 Journalist Rana Ayyub receives death threats over calls demanding a column on the 1984 anti-Sikh riots as CPJ urges swift action to protect journalists in India.


Moldovan journalist Mariana Rață receives death threat after interview

Moldovan journalist Mariana Rață receives death threat after interview

 November 04, 2025 TV8 journalist Mariana Rata in Moldova receives a death threat after interviewing politician Renato Usatii on-air, raising concerns about journalist safety.


Indonesia’s agriculture minister faces backlash over lawsuit against Tempo

Indonesia’s agriculture minister faces backlash over lawsuit against Tempo

 November 03, 2025 Global journalist unions condemn the Indonesian agriculture minister’s lawsuit against Tempo, calling it a threat to press freedom and demanding that the case be withdrawn.


All About Macau to cease print and online operations amid mounting pressure

All About Macau to cease print and online operations amid mounting pressure

 November 02, 2025 Independent outlet All About Macau to halt print and online operations amid rising pressure, financial strain, and legal threats, sparking press freedom concerns in the city.