Turkish court orders opposition leader to pay Erdogan compensation over offshore claims
A Turkish court has ordered main opposition leader Kemal Kılıcdaroglu to pay President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, his relatives and one of his friends a total of TL 197,000 ($29,000) in damages for his allegations that they had secretly transferred money to an offshore company based in the Isle of Man.
According to local reports, Kılıçdaroglu alleged in a parliamentary group meeting in November 2017 that in 2011 the group had conducted transfers amounting to $18 million to an offshore company based in the Isle of Man, a tax haven. He produced SWIFT codes and bank receipts to back up his claims.
The allegations resulted in Kılıçdaroglu being sued for damages by Erdogan and his close circle. After an initial court decision in November 2019 imposing a larger amount of damages was overturned by an appeals court, the case was heard again.
Members of the appeals court that overturned the initial ruling reportedly came under political pressure afterwards, with some members even being denied their right to leave without pay.