Turkey detains 209 in anti-terror raids as security tightened ahead of NATO summit


ANKARA, June 23 (Reuters) - Turkish authorities ⁠detained 209 people in anti-terrorism operations on Tuesday, prosecutors said, a day ⁠after Ankara imposed restrictions on public gatherings ahead of next month's NATO ‌summit.

Opposition groups said the raids were part of what they called a broader crackdown on democracy and civic freedoms in Turkey.

The Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor's Office said arrest warrants had been issued for ​241 suspects under investigations into several militant organisations, including ⁠Islamic State and the far-left ⁠DHKP-C, MLKP and TKP/ML groups.

It said 209 suspects had been detained and efforts to ⁠locate ‌the remaining suspects were underway.

The prosecutor's office and the Justice Ministry were not immediately available for comment.

The operations came a day after the Ankara ⁠Governor's Office announced a 13-day ban on demonstrations, press conferences, ​and other public gatherings ‌from June 28 to July 10, citing security concerns related to the ⁠July 7-8 NATO ​summit.

Prosecutors said in a statement the operation was part of efforts to uncover militant group activities. It did not mention the NATO summit.

Among those detained were journalist and LGBTQ+ rights ⁠activist Yildiz Tar, leftist politicians and several lawyers, ​according to rights group statements. The Progressive Lawyers Association said three of its members were detained.

Authorities have not detailed the allegations against individual suspects. Rights groups said detainees were ⁠subject to a 24-hour restriction on access to lawyers.

The pro-Kurdish DEM Party condemned the operation, saying more than 200 politicians, activists and representatives of democratic organisations had been detained in early-morning house raids.

"NATO summit preparations are being used as a pretext ​to restrict democratic politics and fundamental freedoms," the party ⁠said in a statement, calling for the immediate release of those detained.

LGBTQ+ rights group ​Kaos GL also linked the detentions to restrictions imposed ‌ahead of the summit. Tar, its editor-in-chief, ​was due to appear in court on Wednesday in a separate case.

(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Ece Toksabay; Editing by Daren Butler, Alexandra Hudson)

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