Journalists tried to prevent police from storming their offices, but they were pushed back with tear gas and water cannons. Police then stormed the TV control rooms and pulled the plug on live broadcasts.
Critics said the crackdown aims to silence the opposition ahead of Sunday’s snap election, which was called after a June 7 vote stripped Erdogan’s ruling AK Party of its single-party majority in parliament, and coalition talks failed.
One woman said she was protesting “because of the censorship on the press… and in the name of democracy.”
Journalists and opposition figures also said they would stand firm.
Selahattin Demirtas, co-chair of the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic party (HDP), which beat expectations in June’s election with more than 13 percent of the votes, said: “One way or another, for a long time we have faced similar kinds of unlawful, unconstitutional practices that are not based on any national or international law. In that regard (the raid) didn’t shock us or surprise us, but it was unacceptable.”
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