The first issue of Turkey's largest opposition newspaper, Zaman, was released Sunday since it was seized by the government in a midnight Saturday raid. It was met with widespread condemnation.
As many noted on Twitter, the paper's front page appeared to have transformed overnight into a "propaganda machine" for the regime. It mentioned nothing about the raid on Zaman's headquarters the night before and featured headlines praising the government's work on a new bridge and its strengthening business ties with Iran.
Here is the cover:
In less than 48 hours, the new admin turned seized Zaman into a propaganda piece of the regime in Turkey. pic.twitter.com/ORAAo0r7Ws
- Sevgi Akarcesme (@SevgiAkarcesme) March 6, 2016
Wikimedia Commons
Sevgi Akarcesme, editor-in-chief of Zaman's English-language counterpart Today's Zaman, was put on trial in August after Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, a member of the ruling AKP party, sued her for "insulting" him on Twitter. Akarcesme had tweeted that "Davutoglu, the prime minister of the government that covered up the corruption investigation, has eliminated press freedom in Turkey."