Ekrem Imamoglu, 55, faces more than 140 charges including corruption and running a criminal organisation. Prosecutors are seeking a jail term of up to 2,430 years.
He and his Republican People’s Party (CHP) deny any wrongdoing. They accuse Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his allies of launching a crackdown over the leader’s decline in popularity.
Prior to the trial, which got off to a chaotic start on Monday, Imamoglu was widely seen as one of the few politicians capable of defeating Erdogan, who has been at the top of Turkish politics since 2003.
Another 407 of Imamoglu’s supporters have also been put on trial, accused of running a criminal corruption network headed by the opposition figure, who prosecutors describe as its “founder and leader”.
Imamoglu was greeted by his supporters with cheers and whistles as he entered the courtroom in the Marmara prison on Monday.
But it was not long before proceedings were brought to a halt by the judge after the politician contested the judge’s decision to hear the testimony of other defendants before his in the trial.
The judge called the protest disrespectful and ordered a recess until the afternoon, just 15 minutes after the hearing had started.
Present in the courtroom were Imamoglu’s wife, Dilek, and CHP leader Ozgur Ozel.
Imamoglu was arrested in March last year on the day he was named as the CHP’s presidential candidate for 2028.
His detention triggered the country’s largest street protests in more than a decade, followed by hundreds of arrests and a police crackdown.
Apart from the corruption case, prosecutors have accused him of a raft of other offences including espionage and forging his university degree, a qualification he would need to become president and that has since been annulled.
Turkish authorities deny that the judiciary is being used as a political tool.
But the trial has been strongly criticised by rights groups.
“The trial of Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu follows more than a year of weaponising the criminal justice system against his party and other CHP elected officials while he sits in jail,” Benjamin Ward, deputy Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement last week.
“Looking at these cases as a whole, it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that prosecutors are trying to remove Imamoglu from politics and discredit his party in ways that undermine democracy.”


