Page Précédente

Turkey jails dismissed pro-Kurdish mayor nearly 20 years


Wednesday, 5 June, 2024 , 12:27

Diyarbakir, Turkey, June 5, 2024 (AFP) — A court in Turkey jailed Wednesday a pro-Kurdish mayor for 19 and a half years for "terrorism", his lawyer said Wednesday.

Mehmet Siddik Akis was removed from his post and placed in detention just two days earlier, provoking outrage and brawls in Turkey's parliament.

Denouncing what he said was a "political trial", Akis said: "I'm 53 years old, I've been fighting for all these years and I'll continue to fight."

He served as mayor of the southeastern town of Hakkari for the DEM party, which the authorities accuse of links to the outlawed PKK Kurdish militants. Akis himself has denied any such links.

Following his conviction scuffles broke out in the town, footage posted on social media showed.

On Monday, the governor of the province of Hakkari had banned any demonstrations until June 12.

The governor of the mainly Kurdish province of Bingol issued a similar seven-day ban on Wednesday.

Mehmet Siddik Akis was the first mayor to be dismissed since local elections in March, in which the DEM gained control of local authorities in several large towns in Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast.

On Tuesday, footage from cameras in the national parliament in Ankara showed rival lawmakers brawling as Akis's allies staged a protest in the chamber.

Clashes between protesters and police in Hakkari the same day led to several injuries and arrests. According to the opposition news outlet Medyascope, officers fired rubber bullets at the protesters.

The social democratic CHP, Turkey's main opposition party, has expressed its support for Akis and sent a delegation to Hakkari.

In Turkey's national parliament, the DEM has 57 of the chamber's 594 seats.

In 2019, the government dismissed around fifty elected mayors from the pro-Kurdish party, appointing administrators in their place.

The party's former president, Selahattin Demirtas, jailed since 2016, was sentenced in May to 42 years for a string of charges, including undermining state unity.