The opposition protests have spread despite the government banning gatherings for four days.
Much of the opposition activity has centered around universities, and many of those connected to the demonstrations are now finding their X accounts suspended, observers report.
The majority of the suspended accounts were "university-associated activist accounts, basically sharing protest information, locations for students to go," Yusuf Can, coordinator and analyst at the Wilson Center's Middle East Program, told POLITICO. Many of these accounts are "grassroots activists" with their followings in the low tens of thousands, said Can.
Some accounts appear to be suspended only in Turkey and not in the rest of the world. Activist Ömer Faruk Aslan created a second account to avoid censorship. "Yesterday, my account was blocked by a court order because the tweets exceeded 6 million views," he posted.
Turkey's Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on X that authorities have found 326 social media accounts that are inciting hatred, 72 of which were abroad. A coordinated action between cyber and security authorities led to the arrest of 54 suspects related to the social media accounts, said Yerlikaya.
Yerlikaya on Saturday said 343 people were arrested overnight in a third night of protests against İmamoğlu's arrest. Arrests were made in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Adana, Antalya, Konya and several others, according to media reports.
Sperium3000 on March 22nd, 2025 at 11:26 UTC »
This dude raised s stink when Brazil asked him to suspend accounts doing a misinformation campaign against our elections.
NotaRussianbott89 on March 22nd, 2025 at 10:40 UTC »
Mr free speech absolute over here ? 🤔
hei04 on March 22nd, 2025 at 10:40 UTC »
For fuck sake stop using twitter