Istanbul, Ankara mayors not at risk of being replaced, interior minister says

Istanbul, Ankara mayors not at risk of being replaced, interior minister says
FILE PHOTO: Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu speaks during a news conference for foreign media correspondents in Istanbul, Turkey, August 21, 2019. Ahmet Bolat/Pool via REUTERS Copyright POOL(Reuters)
Copyright POOL(Reuters)
By Reuters
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ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey's government has no plan to replace the opposition mayors of Istanbul and Ankara with state-appointed trustees, as was done to three Kurdish mayors in the country's east last month, Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said on Sunday.

Soylu had threatened last week "to devastate" Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), over his support for the ousted mayors of the cities of Diyarbakir, Van and Mardin.

But in a CNN Turk interview on Sunday, Soylu said: "For Istanbul and Ankara, for such thing to be in question (appointment of a trustee) is not possible."

The three mayors were removed over alleged terror links less than five months after they were elected, sparking sharp criticism from the opposition including Ankara's CHP mayor Mansur Yavas.

Imamoglu - whose election in June dealt President Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party (AKP) a shock defeat - has labelled the move illegal and undemocratic and called for it to be reversed. He visited two of the ousted mayors in Diyarbakir last month.

Imamoglu on Sunday dismissed Soylu's threat as "upsetting" politics.

"It shouldn't become a tradition in this country to blame someone without any judgment. It is against jurisdiction and law," Imamoglu said at a news conference to discuss what he called wasted public funds under previous AKP administrations.

"All of the 82 million people in Turkey are my citizens... What I did was in line with the law and for propagating the national sentiment to all around the country," he said of his visit to Diyarbakir.

His municipality has parked in an Istanbul lot hundreds of cars it says were rented by previous administrations and that represent wasted public funds. He said the cars would be returned and the money spent on public parks.

(Reporting by Irem Koca and Huseyin Aldemir; Writing by Jonathan Spicer; editing by John Stonestreet)

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