Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) is facing the most severe institutional crisis in its modern history, with a court ruling striking at the heart of its leadership, police raids expanding the fallout, and a former chairman hovering in the wings — whether the party wants him or not. The crisis stems from an Ankara court's use of a rarely invoked legal concept: mutlak butlan — "absolute nullity." The court applied it to the CHP's 2023 party congress, effectively declaring it legally void from the outset. The consequences were immediate and sweeping: the entire leadership structure that emerged from that congress, headed by Özgür Özel, was stripped of its legitimacy. In its place, the court's ruling pointed back to the last legally valid leadership — that of Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, the veteran opposition figure who lost the 2023 presidential election to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. For Turkey's opposition and independent observers alike, the r...
Islamabad-mediated channel keeps diplomacy alive, but the two sides remain fundamentally split on sequencing Pakistan's mediation effort between the United States and Iran is holding together, but the talks show no sign of an imminent breakthrough, with the two sides locked in a fundamental disagreement over what comes first: a broader peace settlement or nuclear concessions. Iran has submitted a revised 14-point ceasefire proposal to Washington via Pakistani intermediaries, insisting that a permanent end to hostilities, the lifting of US sanctions, the removal of the naval blockade, and the release of frozen assets must all be agreed before any discussion of nuclear restrictions can begin. Tehran has also indicated it will seek war reparations and refuses to place uranium enrichment on the table as part of any initial agreement. Washington is pushing in the opposite direction. The Trump administration, led in these talks by special envoy Steve Witkoff and senior adviser Jared Kush...