ISTANBUL: A leading Turkish newspaper opposed to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and seized by authorities warned of the “darkest days” in the history of the press Saturday in a defiant edition as police used rubber bullets to disperse a new protest.
The late-night swoop against the Zaman newspaper raised fresh concerns over declining media freedoms in Turkey, a key European Union ally, ahead of a visit by Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to Brussels Monday for a crucial summit meeting with EU leaders.
Zaman, closely linked to Erdogan’s arch-foe, the US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, was on Friday placed under the control of a board of trustees after a court order which critics said was another attempt to silence opposition media.
“The Constitution is suspended,” the newspaper, which managed to print its latest issue despite the takeover, said on its front page in large font on a black background.
“Yesterday (Friday) marked one of the darkest days in the history of Turkish press,” it said.
Turkish riot police on Saturday fired rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse a new protest by the newspaper’s supporters outside its Istanbul headquarters.
“Free press cannot be silenced,” a group of demonstrators shouted.
Police used large amounts of tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets to disperse around 500 people, an AFP photographer at the scene reported.
Zaman, with an estimated circulation of 650,000, went to print earlier than usual on Friday evening before the police raid and the number of its pages was reduced to 16 from 24, one of its journalists said.
Sevgi Akarcesme, the editor-in-chief of the paper’s English language edition Today’s Zaman, said on Twitter on Saturday that the newspaper office had had all Internet connections cut.
“We are not able to work anymore,” she wrote.
The late-night swoop against the Zaman newspaper raised fresh concerns over declining media freedoms in Turkey, a key European Union ally, ahead of a visit by Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to Brussels Monday for a crucial summit meeting with EU leaders.
Zaman, closely linked to Erdogan’s arch-foe, the US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, was on Friday placed under the control of a board of trustees after a court order which critics said was another attempt to silence opposition media.
“The Constitution is suspended,” the newspaper, which managed to print its latest issue despite the takeover, said on its front page in large font on a black background.
“Yesterday (Friday) marked one of the darkest days in the history of Turkish press,” it said.
Turkish riot police on Saturday fired rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse a new protest by the newspaper’s supporters outside its Istanbul headquarters.
“Free press cannot be silenced,” a group of demonstrators shouted.
Police used large amounts of tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets to disperse around 500 people, an AFP photographer at the scene reported.
Zaman, with an estimated circulation of 650,000, went to print earlier than usual on Friday evening before the police raid and the number of its pages was reduced to 16 from 24, one of its journalists said.
Sevgi Akarcesme, the editor-in-chief of the paper’s English language edition Today’s Zaman, said on Twitter on Saturday that the newspaper office had had all Internet connections cut.
“We are not able to work anymore,” she wrote.
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