80+ cities Around the World has been Protesting since the March 23rd!
80+ cities around the world has been protesting since the March 23rd!
Aachen, Adelaide, Amsterdam, Auckland, Barcelona, Belfast, Berlin, Birmingham, Bologna, Bordeaux, Boston, Brighton, Bristol, Brussels, Bucharest, Calgary, Cardiff, Cologne, Copenhagen, Cork, Dortmund, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Eindhoven, Florence, Florida, Frankfurt, Geneva, Genova, Gothenburg, Groningen, Hamburg, Hannover, Houston, Jena, Leipzig, Lille, Lisbon, London, Los Angeles, Maastricht, Madrid, Mainz, Malmö, Manchester, Melbourne, Miami, Milan, Montreal, Munich, Naples, New York, Ottawa, Padova, Paris, Perth, Philadelphia, Pisa, Porto, Prague, Rennes, Rome, Rotterdam, San Francisco, St. Julian's, Strasbourg, Stockholm, Stuttgart, Sydney, The Hague, Tivat, Toronto, Toulouse, Turin, Utrecht, Vancouver, Victoria, Vienna, Washington, Warsaw, Wellington, Zurich
The Unfolding Crisis of Justice in Turkiye
Since March 19, 2025, Istanbul’s elected mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu has been behind bars. His detention—without a clear legal process, without transparent evidence, without trial—has become a turning point. But it is not an isolated case. Rather, it is a visible crack in a much deeper collapse of justice in Turkey.
Across the country, hundreds of students, journalists, activists, and citizens remain in jail—not because they committed crimes, but because they used their constitutional rights: protesting, speaking, organizing, demanding change. Today, students who stood for climate action, women who marched for equality, and workers who asked for fair conditions are behind bars. Court cases are delayed endlessly, legal access is limited, and arbitrary rulings have replaced any faith in rule of law.
What’s happening is not law enforcement—it’s lawlessness under power.
Since İmamoğlu’s arrest, protests have erupted in over 80 cities around the world. From London to Melbourne, voices are rising with a single message: NO SALVATION ALONE!
In Turkey, demonstrators are met with tear gas, detentions, and media blackouts. But still, they show up. Because silence is no longer an option.
This is not just about a mayor. It’s about a generation being punished for dreaming of democracy. It’s about a country where asking questions is treated like a threat. It’s about the people standing up for their rights, for democracy, and for justice for all!