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Ousted Turkish opposition leader Ozel draws thousands in Ankara protest

By Thomson Reuters May 30, 2026 | 10:04 AM

By Ece Toksabay

ANKARA, May 30 (Reuters) – Turkey’s ousted opposition leader Ozgur Ozel showed he can still command strong support on Saturday, drawing a crowd of thousands in Ankara despite a ​court ruling that removed him from office and dealt a ‌blow to President Tayyip Erdogan’s challengers.

After addressing supporters – estimated in the tens of thousands by the private Anka news agency and media outlets close to the opposition – Ozel led a march through the capital following last week’s ruling that removed ‌him ​as leader of the main opposition CHP.

The court ⁠annulled the CHP’s 2023 ⁠party congress, effectively reinstating former chairman Kemal Kilicdaroglu – a divisive figure within the party who lost to Erdogan in an election earlier that year.

The move could boost Erdogan’s chances of extending his more ​than two-decade rule of the NATO member country and major emerging market economy.

On Saturday, Kilicdaroglu visited the CHP party headquarters for the ⁠first time since the May 21 ruling ⁠and pledged to purge the party of corruption, referring ​to cases involving CHP-run municipalities.

The ousted leadership denies the allegations, calling them ​politically motivated, a charge the government rejects.

As Kilicdaroglu spoke, Ozel ‌addressed a bigger crowd in front of the party’s Ankara provincial office.

“This is not an internal matter for the CHP,” Ozel said. “This is a matter between Erdogan and the nation. On one side are the ⁠seized buildings; on the other, millions standing up for their party and their country.”

He said the court ruling did not legitimise Kilicdaroglu’s leadership and called ⁠for an immediate ‌party congress, as supporters chanted “Leader Ozgur!” and “Traitor Kemal!”

He ⁠then led a peaceful march to the mausoleum of ​Mustafa ‌Kemal Ataturk, founder of modern Turkey and the CHP.

Ankara ​Mayor Mansur ⁠Yavas, seen as an alternative CHP presidential candidate to jailed Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu – still considered Erdogan’s biggest political rival – also joined the protest and called for a congress.

Kilicdaroglu said one would be held “as soon as possible,” without giving a timeline.

(Reporting by Ece Toksabay and Huseyin Hayatsever; Editing ​by Ros Russell)