Ankara slammed over sacking of mayors

Istanbul’s mayor on Saturday hit out at the Turkish
government’s ouster of three pro-Kurdish municipality chiefs during a visit to
the city of Diyarbakir.
Ekrem Imamoglu of the main opposition Republican
People’s Party (CHP), who won in the June rerun of the Istanbul vote, called
Ankara’s move an act of “carelessness.”
Imamoglu’s visit was the latest sign of warming
relations between the CHP and the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).
The mayors of the eastern cities of Diyarbakir,
Mardin and Van — all HDP members elected in March — were sacked on Aug. 19 over
suspected links to Kurdish militants.
Adnan Selcuk Mizrakli was Diyarbakir mayor before he
was replaced by a government-appointed governor.
“There can be neither democracy nor rule of law in a
place where elected officials do not leave via the ballot box,” Imamoglu told
reporters in Diyarbakir.
He had met with ousted Mardin mayor, Ahmet Turk — a
key figure in the Kurdish movement — and Mizrakli, who said Imamoglu’s visit
offered “a glimmer of hope and was a source of strength for us.”
His visit to the Kurdish-majority region is
significant for the secular CHP, which has not always had easy relations with
the HDP.
But since Imamoglu’s election success was
significantly supported by the votes of Kurds, as the HDP put forward no
candidate in Istanbul, this relationship has improved.
The Istanbul mayor also paid tribute to Tahir Elci,
head of the bar association in Diyarbakir and a campaigner for Kurdish rights,
during a visit to his grave.
Elci was shot dead during clashes between Kurdish
militants and police officers in 2015.
Last May, the CHP’s presidential candidate Muharrem
Ince visited the imprisoned ex-HDP chief Selahattin Demirtas ahead of
presidential elections in June 2018.