Turkish court rules to remove head of main opposition party in latest blow

A Turkish court has annulled the election of Ozgur Ozel as chairman of the main opposition party, the CHP, effectively reinstalling his predecessor Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

Turkish court rules to remove head of main opposition party in latest blow

A Turkish court on Thursday issued a ruling that effectively removed the head of the country's main opposition party by annulling a 2023 congress that elected him.

The move deals a serious blow to the beleaguered Republican People's Party, or CHP, as it struggles under waves of legal cases targeting its members and elected officials.

An appeals court in Turkiye's capital Ankara declared the CHP congress that picked Ozgur Ozel as chairman to be null, ordering that he should be replaced by his predecessor Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

Last year, a lower court ruled against claims of irregularities and misconduct surrounding Ozel's election but Thursday's decision overturned the original verdict.

The ruling led to frantic meetings at the CHP's Ankara headquarters, further threatening the opposition's chances of unseating President Recep Tayyip Erdogan after more than two decades in office.

The next presidential election is due in 2028 but Erdogan can call for an early vote. His main challenger, the CHP mayor of Istanbul Ekrem Imamoglu, has been imprisoned since March last year and is currently on trial on corruption charges.

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