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Turkey Orders Police to Evict Ousted Opposition Leadership From Headquarters

ANKARA, May 24 (Reuters) – Turkish authorities ⁠ordered ⁠police to evict ⁠the leadership of the main opposition ​Republican People’s Party (CHP) from their headquarters on Sunday, ‌enforcing a court ruling ‌that reinstated the former leader and fuelled ⁠a ⁠political crisis.

Riot police and crowds gathered outside the ​gates of CHP headquarters in the Turkish capital after the Ankara governor’s office issued the order to ​remove CHP members aligned with ousted leader Ozgur ⁠Ozel.

A ⁠Turkish appeals court on ⁠Thursday annulled ​the results of a CHP congress at which Ozel ​was elected ⁠in 2023, citing unspecified irregularities. In Ozel’s place, the court reinstated former CHP Chairman Kemal Kilicdaroglu, who lost to President Tayyip Erdogan ⁠in elections earlier that year.

Ozel called on Saturday for a ⁠new party congress to be held as soon as possible while Kilicdaroglu has said that a congress would be held at an “appropriate” time.

The ousted CHP leadership under Ozel has condemned the court ruling as a “judicial coup” and Ozel promised to fight it through legal ⁠appeals and to remain “day and night” in the party’s Ankara headquarters.

CHP lawmakers on Saturday elected Ozel as leader of the party’s ​parliamentary group.

(Reporting by Ece Toksabay and Daren ​ButlerEditing by David Goodman)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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