‘Enough is enough’: Tractors block roads in Erdogan stronghold as opposition rallies for jailed mayor, early elections

‘Enough is enough’: Tractors block roads in Erdogan stronghold as opposition rallies for jailed mayor, early elections


ISTANBUL, April 20 — Around 100 tractors blocked roads in central Turkey yesterday as their drivers joined the latest anti-government protest called by the main opposition CHP.

The rally in the central town of Yozgat took place exactly a month after the arrest of Istanbul’s popular opposition mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu — President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s biggest political rival.

That detention sparked Turkey’s worst street protests in a decade and prompted a sharp crackdown by the authorities who detained nearly 2,000 people.

Although the initial mass demonstrations tailed off, the government has failed to stamp out the unrest, with ongoing protests by university and high school students, and CHP leader Ozgur Ozel calling weekly rallies across Turkey.

Wearing a flat cap, Ozel drove a tractor into Yozgat on Saturday at the head of a long convoy where several thousand flag-waving protesters had rallied in this deeply conservative farming heartland that has long backed Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted AKP and its nationalist allies.

“Government, resign!” they chanted in footage posted online by several opposition news outlets.

“I warn the authorities who see the people of Yozgat as ants and are trying to crush them: we will not let you crush these hard-working farmers!” Ozel told the crowd.

‘Enough is enough’

“The ‘despised farmer’ and the villager who is ignored will demand an accounting, starting here in Yozgat! The nation’s future will be saved by determination and resolve. It’s not… those who fear the ballot box who will win, but the people!” he later wrote on X.

The jailed mayor’s wife Dilek Imamoglu said people wanted change.

“The workers, farmers, students, women and men who are building our future … have said ‘enough is enough’ in Yozgat today. Millions want a country ruled by justice and law that is united!” she said on X.

Last month, around a dozen local farmers were fined for staging a tractor protest over Imamoglu’s arrest and the government’s roundup of young protesters which has sparked widespread anger.

“The government is putting pressure on students but the future of Turkey is the students, right?” one of the tractor drivers told the Anka news agency, without giving his name.

“We came here to support each other, we can’t afford anything because of hunger and thirst…. Our government should stop being partisan and deal with people’s hunger,” he said.

At the rally, organisers read out a letter from Imamoglu urging support for the opposition’s call for early elections.

“If the government were to call early elections today, the economy would get back on track,” he wrote in a direct appeal to those who voted for Erdogan’s AKP or its nationalist MHP ally. – AFP



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