DW’s Alican Uludag released, but trial continues

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A court in Ankara on Thursday opened proceedings against Deutsche Welle reporter Alican Uludag, and released Uludag from detention while the case against him continued.

The next court date is scheduled for September 18.

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Uludag’s lawyer Abbas Yalcin welcomed his client’s release after months in detention, but also argued that even if Uludag were convicted, “he would not spend 90 days in prison.”

Yalcin said the period in detention could be seen “as the equivalent of a punishment issued prior to conviction, or even as exceeding this.”

“We hope that this will bring an end to proceedings and we ask for an urgent decision on his acquittal,” he said.

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What is the trial about?

Uludag was detained in February, accused of insulting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, spreading misleading information and disparaging state institutions or the Turkish state in a total of 22 posts on social media.

“Insulting” or disparaging Erdogan is a criminal offense in Turkey, and one that the longstanding Turkish leader has famously prosecuted on thousands of occasions during more than two decades in power.

<figure class="placeholder-Press organizations hold a protest outside an Ankara court calling for the release of DW Turkish correspondent Alican Uludag. May 20, 2026.

Press groups held a protest outside the courtroom expressing support this week

Uludag — who in Turkey’s restrictive media landscape continued to focus on contentious issues like the judicial system, human rights violations and corruption — denied all the charges, saying he was objectively reporting.

What did Uludag say in court?

Uludag was denied a request to appear in court in person, instead appearing r defense.” He said he had spent 90 days removed from his family and his workplace.

“As an independent journalist I tried to write the truth and to defend the public’s right to information. I was frequently threatened, but my conscience is clear. I have never done things as a journalist that I now have cause to regret. The freedom of press and opinion guaranteed by our constitution must not be infringed,” he said.

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Uludag told the court that it seemed the Turkish justice system wanted to ‘convict me out of the public eye’e alliance

“I have committed no crimes, rather I have only done my job; I have insulted nobody and I demand an acquittal,” Uludag told the court.

The chairman of Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in Turkey, Erol Onderoglu, responded online.

“Alican Uludag’s release brings us joy, yet his detention will remain a 90-day mistreatment inflicted on an investigative journalist,” Onderoglu said. “He should not have spent even a single day in detention because of either his reporting or his commentary.

Turkey among the world’s worst Press Freedom Index performers

Following Uludag’s arrest, DW Director General Barbara Massing called the allegations against him as baseless. She called his arrest a “targeted attempt at intimidation,” and said his case demonstrated “the extent to which the government is massively repressing press freedom.”

NATO member and EU aspirant Turkey perennially ranks near the bottom of press freedom indexes, not least because of its track record of imprisoning critical reporters. In this year’s RSF Press Freedom Index, Turkey slid back four places to 163rd out of 180 countries, just below Iraq and Sudan and just above Yemen, Belarus and Myanmar.

German gov’t ‘deeply concerned’ about DW journalist’s arrest

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Edited by: Sean Sinico

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