‘Living in a dictatorship’: İstanbul mayor’s detention sparks anger

Supporters of the mayor of İstanbul demonstrate in front of the Turkish police barricade against his detention over a corruption probe in İstanbul March 19, 2025. The mayor of İstanbul, Ekrem İmamoğlu, the main opponent of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, was detained on March 19, 2024 in the morning along with dozens of his aides, elected representatives and members of his party, accused of ‘corruption’, according to the city's public prosecutor. (Photo by YASIN AKGUL / AFP)

“We’re living in a dictatorship,” said Kuzey, an İstanbul shopkeeper, after police detained the city’s popular opposition mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu on corruption allegations.

The early morning detention of İmamoğlu on graft charges was purely political, Kuzey said as he opened his shop near Taksim Square.

The move came days before İmamoğlu, the main political rival of Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, was formally named the opposition candidate for the 2028 race.

“Whenever this guy and his dirty team see someone strong, they panic and do something illegal to him,” said this 40-something dressed in jeans and a black top, referring to Erdoğan and the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which has been in power since 2002.

“But we Turks are a strong people, we’re used to fighting these things,” he said as large numbers of police headed for Taksim Square, which was fenced off with metal barricades.

Four riot-control trucks were in place, all armed with water canon, to prevent any protest at the huge square that was the epicenter of demonstrations against Erdoğan in 2013, when he was prime minister.

Many people were reluctant to comment on the fast-moving events, and those who did, refused to give more than their first name.

“This is very bad, and I don’t know what will happen next. You never know what they’ll do,” said a passerby named Mustafa. “I’m angry, but what can we do?”

In a nearby street, a pensioner in a grey beret also expressed dismay over the detention of İmamoğlu and more than 100 of his associates, many of them members of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

“I am sad for my country, it shouldn’t be like this,” he told Agence France-Presse, refusing to give his name.

‘Coups used to be by soldiers’

In front of the police headquarters where the mayor was taken, several hundred people gathered to protest near the police barriers, shouting, “İmamoğlu, you’re not alone!”

“Government, resign!” they yelled.

“One day, the AKP will have to give an accounting to the people.”

On İstiklal, the main pedestrian shopping street, there was turmoil at currency exchange offices that serve millions of tourists every year, with news of the arrest sending the Turkish lira to historic lows against the dollar and the euro.

In front of one of them 63-year-old Hasan Yıldız was wide-eyed about the arrest, agreeing it was little more than a “coup” against the opposition.

The move came just days before the CHP was to have formally named İmamoğlu their candidate for the 2028 presidential election.

“In the past, it was the soldiers who carried out coups. Today it’s the politicians,” Yıldız said, indifferent to the police car parked nearby.

“Foreign investors are not going to invest in Turkey any more. Who would want to invest in a country without justice or the rule of law?” he said.

‘Prices will go up’

Another bypasser named Emre, who works nearby, said the upheaval would mean more economic pain for regular people.

“I’m not surprised by anything anymore. The exchange rate will soon be 50 liras to the euro,” he told AFP of a rate that soared a historic high of 42 liras to the euro after his arrest.

“And it will be reflected in the cost bread and the cost of everything. All because of the unjust actions of one man,” he said.

“I am furious,” admitted Zeynep Kara, 68, saying the reason for İmamoğlu’s detention was “obvious” — to stop him from running — with the charges of corruption a mere “pretext” to justify it.

“The situation is not going to get any better,” she said.

Agence France-Presse