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Turkey opposition crackdown spreads to Izmir with 157 detentions, NTV says

Turkey opposition crackdown spreads to Izmir with 157 detentions, NTV says

Reuters3 days ago
ISTANBUL, July 1 (Reuters) - Turkish authorities detained 157 people including opposition party members and a former mayor in Izmir early on Tuesday, broadcaster NTV reported, expanding a months-long legal crackdown on the opposition that had been focused on Istanbul.
The Izmir prosecutor ordered the detentions in the early morning hours as part of an investigation into corruption, tender rigging and fraud in the west-coast city, NTV reported.
Murat Bakan, an Izmir MP from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) - which has faced waves of arrests since late last year - said former Izmir Mayor Tunc Soyer was detained along with senior bureaucrats and a party provincial chairman.
"We woke up to another dawn operation today," he said on X. "We are facing a process similar to what happened in Istanbul," Bakan said, adding that it appeared to be "a judicial system acting on instructions".
Those arrested in the broader crackdown include Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu - President Tayyip Erdogan's main political rival. Imamoglu was jailed in March pending trial on corruption charges, which he denies. That sparked the largest street protests in a decade and a sharp selloff in Turkish assets.
The CHP denies the charges. It and some Western countries have called the crackdown a politicised move to eliminate electoral challenges to Erdogan and silence dissent.
The government denies these claims, saying the judiciary and Turkey's courts are independent.
NTV said the investigation into Izmir municipality in part looks at potential corruption involving subcontractor companies.
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Lula visits former Argentinian president under house arrest in snub to Milei
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  • The Guardian

Lula visits former Argentinian president under house arrest in snub to Milei

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Lula visits former Argentinian president under house arrest in snub to Milei
Lula visits former Argentinian president under house arrest in snub to Milei

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Lula visits former Argentinian president under house arrest in snub to Milei

Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has eschewed a one-on-one meeting with the Argentinian president, Javier Milei, during a trip to Buenos Aires, instead opting to visit Milei's political rival, former president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who is under house arrest. Lula was in the Argentinian capital on Thursday to attend the Mercosur summit. He arrived at Kirchner's flat – which in recent weeks has become something of a pilgrimage site for her supporters – at about 12.30pm and spent roughly 45 minutes there. There had been speculation that the two might appear together on the balcony from which Kirchner, 72, often waves to sympathisers, but that moment never came. Kirchner, who served as Argentina's president from 2007 to 2015, was convicted over the irregular awarding of public road contracts to a businessman close to her family – a scheme that, according to the courts, cost the public purse an estimated $500m. The ruling also barred her from running for any political office. Kirchner, who denied all the charges against her, was sentenced to six years in prison for corruption in June. Due to her age, judges granted her house arrest, but with a series of restrictions, including the requirement that all visits be authorised in advance – as was the case with Lula, whose visit was approved by a judge the day before. Shortly after 1pm, Lula, 79, left the residence without speaking to reporters, greeting a few dozen supporters waiting outside before departing for the Brazilian embassy. Kirchner, who claims to have been the target of political persecution, posted photos of the meeting and wrote: 'Lula was also persecuted, they also used lawfare to put him in prison, they also tried to silence him. They couldn't. He returned with the vote of the Brazilian people and his head held high. That's why today his visit was much more than a personal gesture: it was a political act of solidarity.' Earlier in the day, he had formally received the rotating presidency of Mercosur – the regional trade bloc whose full members are Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, with Bolivia in the process of joining and Venezuela currently suspended – from Milei. The near-total absence of a relationship between Lula and Milei was summed up in the closing moment of the summit: after shaking hands, Lula moved in for a hug, which Milei only registered belatedly – resulting in a stiff, uncomfortable embrace. The two, who delivered opposing speeches at the summit and hold conflicting positions on issues ranging from climate change – which Milei denies – to the Israel-Palestine conflict, have never held private talks. Milei has in the past called Lula a 'communist' and 'corrupt', and the Brazilian did not attend his inauguration. In 2024, Milei left the Mercosur summit in Paraguay early to travel to Brazil and meet Lula's main political rival, former president Jair Bolsonaro, during a Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) event. Within Lula's circle, the visit to Kirchner was seen both as a response to Milei's gesture in 2024 and a symbolic act of solidarity, echoing the 580 days Lula spent in prison on corruption charges that were later overturned by the supreme court. While Kirchner never visited Lula in prison, he was visited in 2019 by Alberto Fernández, who went on to win that year's presidential election with her as his running mate.

Emil Bove's confirmation hearing was a travesty
Emil Bove's confirmation hearing was a travesty

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Emil Bove's confirmation hearing was a travesty

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Trump was convicted of 34 felonies of financial fraud to subvert an election. Upon Trump's election, he appointed Bove as acting deputy attorney general and then associate deputy once Todd Blanche was confirmed as deputy, reuniting the law partners, both Trump defense attorneys now resuming that role in an official capacity. On 31 January, Bove sent two memos, the first firing dozens of justice department prosecutors and the second firing FBI agents who had worked on the cases of January 6 insurrectionists, whom Trump pardoned on his inauguration day. Bove quoted Trump that their convictions were 'a grave national injustice'. He also had his own history of conflict with fellow prosecutors and FBI agents. Asked about his actions by Senator Dick Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, Bove presented himself as even-handed. 'I did and continue to condemn unlawful behavior, particularly violence against law enforcement,' he said. 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Bove also deflected questions about his central role in the dropping of charges against Eric Adams. The acting US attorney for the southern district of New York, Danielle Sassoon, had resigned in protest, writing in a letter that Bove's memo directing her to dismiss the charges had 'nothing to do with the strength of the case'. She noted that in the meeting to fix 'what amounted to a quid pro quo … Mr Bove admonished a member of my team who took notes during that meeting and directed the collection of those notes at the meeting's conclusion.' Questioned about the Adams scandal, Bove denied any wrongdoing. Senator John A Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, played his helpmate. He asked Bove to 'swear to your higher being' that there was no quid pro quo. 'Absolutely not,' Bove said. 'Do you swear on your higher being?' 'On every bone in my body,' Bove replied. Hallelujah! Then Bove was asked about the letter sent by former justice department lawyer Erez Reuveni alleging that Bove planned the defiance of court rulings against the administration's deportation policy. 'I have never advised a Department of Justice attorney to violate a court order,' Bove said. Senator Adam Schiff, Democrat of California, repeatedly asked him if it was true he had said 'fuck you' as his suggested plan of action against adverse court decisions. Bove hemmed and hawed, and finally said: 'I don't recall.' Senator Cory Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, remarked: 'I am hoping more evidence is going to come out that shows that you lied before this committee.' Grassley, however, succeeded in protecting Bove. Bondi and Blanche stared down the Republican senators whose majority can put Bove on the bench. He is Trump's model appointment of what he wants in a judge. In announcing his nomination, Trump tweeted: 'Emil Bove will never let you down!' In another scene in The Godfather, Virgil 'The Turk' Sollozzo, another Mafia boss, comes to Vito Corleone, offering a deal to cut him in on the narcotics trade. 'I need, Don Corleone,' he says, 'those judges that you carry in your pockets like so many nickels and dimes.' It was an offer that the Godfather refused. He left the drugs, but kept the judges. Sidney Blumenthal, a former senior adviser to President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton, has published three books of a projected five-volume political life of Abraham Lincoln: A Self-Made Man, Wrestling With His Angel and All the Powers of Earth. He is a Guardian US columnist and co-host of The Court of History podcast

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