“It’s all utter rubbish,” Istanbul’s jailed mayor Ekrem Imamoglu told an Istanbul court of the spying charges against him at a new trial on Monday, his words conveyed by lawyers and journalists.
“This indictment is a complete travesty of justice,” said the 54-year-old, waving a copy of the indictment as the latest case against him opened at a court linked to the prison where he has been held for more than a year.
His remarks were posted on X by the MLSA rights group that is observing the trial.
Imamoglu was arrested and jailed as part of a graft probe in March last year, although the charges against him — which include allegations of espionage and terror ties — have continued to pile up.
“I will not defend myself against such an absurd charge as espionage,” said Imamoglu, who is widely seen as one of the only politicians capable of defeating President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the ballot box.
His arrest came just days before the main opposition CHP named him as its candidate for the next presidential race, due by mid-2028.
According to the indictment, Imamoglu and three other suspects — one a journalist — are accused of sharing the details of millions of Istanbul residents with foreign intelligence services in an alleged crime of “political espionage”.
“If there is espionage, let the MIT (intelligence service) and all relevant intelligence units come forward and show the nation a single piece of concrete evidence,” he said, according to supporters observing the trial.
“The indictment is 159 pages long. All of it is utter rubbish! … Shame on you, Mr President, members of the jury,” he told the presiding judge, saying he had not read “a single page” of the charges against him, and would not do so.
Imamoglu was elected mayor of Turkey’s largest city in 2019, and re-elected in 2024 when the CHP won a huge victory over Erdogan’s ruling AKP in the local elections.
“Is it a crime to win the election in Istanbul, or to have a say in our country’s politics, starting with Istanbul, Mr President?” he asked.
“Who will call this a case of espionage? This is a political case, Mr President, brought by those who are afraid of facing me at the ballot box.”
The espionage charges were brought against him in October, with the trial running in parallel to a sweeping graft case which opened on March 9 in which prosecutors want him jailed for 2,430 years.

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