Turkey has detained the board chairman of opposition daily Cumhuriyet, according to the paper, which has been the target of an intensifying crackdown since July’s failed coup.
Akin Atalay was taken into custody at Istanbul’s airport after arriving from Germany, said Cumhuriyet, which also saw nine of its staff arrested last week amid swelling concern over media freedom in Turkey.
The paper has in recent years taken a strong line against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP).
Atalay was targeted by a warrant that was part of a probe into “terrorist activities”, and ushered into a police vehicle waiting for him on the tarmac.
Some 35,000 people have been arrested and tens of thousands more have lost their jobs – including military officers, judges, teachers, civil servants and journalists – in a sweeping crackdown in the wake of the failed July bid to oust Erdogan.
Since the coup attempt, more than 100 journalists have been arrested while 170 media organs including newspapers and broadcasters have been closed down, the Turkey Journalists’ Association has said on its website.
Turkey was ranked 151st of 180 countries in the 2016 World Press Freedom index published by Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
Speaking to AFP, RSF editor-in-chief Virginie Dangles appealed to the world community to “make the Turkish government understand that this … response cannot go without consequences”.
Last week, nine MPs from the opposition pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP), including its co-leaders Selahattin Demirtas and Figen Yuksekdag, were detained pending a trial on terror charges.
Cumhuriyet’s exiled former editor-in-chief, Can Dundar, fled to Germany earlier this year while appealing against a prison term for revealing state secrets.
Dundar was given nearly six years behind bars for a story about a shipment of arms intercepted at the Syrian border, which had prompted a furious Erdogan to warn Dundar he would “pay a heavy price”.
Erdogan’s opponents and rights groups have accused authorities of using the state of emergency after the failed putsch to stifle critics.
“Cumhuriyet is the voice and breath of Turkey,” said Huseyin Karabulut, who was among supporters in front of the paper’s Istanbul offices.
He feared the paper could be taken over by authorities as the Zaman daily was in March.
Among the nine to be held ahead of trial were Cumhuriyet’s editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu, celebrated cartoonist Musa Kart and influential anti-Erdogan columnist Kadri Gursel.
However, columnists Hikmet Cetinkaya and Aydin Engin were released on bail on health grounds and because of their age.
Two other suspects from the newspaper’s accounting department were released without charge.
The suspects are charged with links to the Kurdish militant Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the movement of US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, blamed for the failed coup bid.
Gulen denies the accusations.




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