Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu in shouting match with judge as trial begins

The sprawling corruption trial of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu commenced under intense scrutiny at the Silivri courthouse complex, marking the beginning of what could become Turkey’s most politically significant judicial proceeding in years. The suspended mayor, facing over 140 criminal charges alongside 406 co-defendants, immediately challenged the court’s procedures as supporters rallied outside the massive courtroom designed to accommodate approximately 1,000 attendees.

Proceedings opened with dramatic confrontations as presiding judges denied Imamoglu’s request to address his supporters and subsequently cut his microphone when he attempted to speak from the defendant’s bench. ‘Starting the trial in this way is very wrong,’ Imamoglu declared. ‘People who have been victimized here must be able to defend themselves.’

The trial’s scale presents unprecedented logistical challenges, with court officials estimating that merely verifying the identities of all defendants and legal representatives could consume two full days. Among the 407 defendants, 107 remain in pre-trial detention while nearly 300 have been released pending judicial proceedings.

Defense attorneys immediately raised multiple procedural objections, alleging limited access to evidence, judicial bias, and fundamental irregularities in trial management. Lawyers revealed that nearly 100 pages of the indictment were missing from the electronic system, while detainees struggle to review tens of thousands of pages of evidence with only two hours of weekly computer access—a situation one attorney described as requiring ‘a titanic effort’ for adequate defense preparation.

Further controversy emerged when defense teams discovered that the witness list had apparently been leaked to pro-government media outlet Yeni Safak before being formally shared with legal representatives. The court additionally rejected defense motions seeking prosecutor recusal and live broadcast of hearings.

The prosecution seeks staggering prison terms ranging from 849 to 2,430 years against Imamoglu on charges including criminal organization establishment, bribery, extortion, asset laundering, and bid rigging. The mayor and his Republican People’s Party (CHP) maintain their innocence, characterizing the case as politically motivated.

The trial carries profound implications for Turkey’s political landscape, potentially eliminating a leading opposition figure widely considered President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s most formidable potential challenger. Imamoglu has been under arrest since March 2025 and already suffered a setback to his presidential ambitions when a court previously invalidated his university degree—a mandatory qualification for presidential candidates.

With parliamentary and presidential elections not formally scheduled until 2028, the trial’s outcome could significantly influence Turkey’s political trajectory, particularly if Erdogan seeks constitutional changes to pursue a third term or calls early elections in 2027.