Turkish comedian Deniz Goktas detained at Istanbul airport
You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.
Skip to content<br>Skip to main menu<br>Skip to more DW sites
In focus<br>Venezuela quakesIranFIFA World Cup
Latest audioLatest videos<br>Live TV
Advertisement
https://p.dw.com/p/5GRk1
The comedian's set on YouTube has prompted political and religious debate in Turkey and attracted millions of viewsImage: YouTube/Deniz GöktaşAdvertisement
Turkish stand-up comedian Deniz Goktas was detained on Thursday on his return from abroad to Istanbul International Airport.
Goktas was taken into custody on arrival.
What appears to have led to Goktas' detention?
The news follows days after a video Goktas shared online gathered traction in Turkey.
"My favorite joke, for some reason, hasn't been shared much," he wrote as a caption for the roughly 3-minute clip shared on X on June 30. That garnered more than 6 million views in under 72 hours, while his full 90-minute set on YouTube had more than 8.5 million views on YouTube as of Thursday afternoon.
The shorter clip included comments about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Islam.
"Insulting" either religious beliefs or the head of state has the potential to prompt a criminal investigation in Turkey, despite its nominally secular constitution and guarantees of free speech.
Why Europe stays silent in Turkey's opposition crisis<br>To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
What did prosecutors say about the detention and investigation?
Istanbul's chief public prosecutor's office issued a statement saying that authorities had received 185 public complaints about the video and had launched an investigation as a result.
It said the probe concerned the controversial Article 216 (3) of the Turkish Penal Code, which criminalizes "publicly insulting religious values adopted by a segment of the public." This supposed crime can carry a jail term of six months to a year.
"Deniz Goktas was apprehended at Istanbul Airport on July 2, 2026. Procedures are currently underway to transfer the suspect to the custody of the Istanbul Security Branch Directorate, the law enforcement unit conducting the investigation," prosecutors said.
The statement did not say Goktas was formally under arrest or facing charges, only that he was under investigation and in detention.
Politicians from Erdogan's conservative Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the left-wing Republican People's Party (CHP) had argued over the video's contents in parliament a day earlier, according to a report on the T24 news site.
It summarized the dispute as pitting the protection of "sacred values" against upholding "freedom of expression."
How does Turkey use its laws against insulting religion?
According to the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), Turkey's prosecution of insulting religious values is "in contravention of the country's human rights commitments."
Among countries in or partly in Europe, only Russia makes more frequent use of rules criminalizing the criticism of religion.
"This is especially concerning as the government, including the president and other officials, increasingly rely on this provision to target and silence individuals who express criticism in religious terms, disclose beliefs or a lack thereof that differ from those of the majority of the population, or engage with religion in a way perceived as 'mocking' or 'irreverent,'" the USCIRF wrote in a 2022 report.
Erdogan's government has also attracted attention in recent years for its prosecution of people deemed to have unfairly criticized the authorities, and for the various lawsuits against leading members of the opposition, particularly the CHP.
The country is also tightening security ahead of the NATO summit in Ankara next week.
NATO: Caught in Erdogan’s trap?<br>To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Edited by: Sean Sinico
Don't let the algorithm hide the news. If you rely on our team for trusted reporting, please take a moment to select us as your Preferred Source on Google by clicking here and hitting the "star" or "preferred" button, so you'll always see our verified news first.
Advertisement
Skip next section More on Politics from EuropeMore on Politics from Europe
Albanian PM opens up about Kushner-linked tourism project<br>Prime Minister Edi Rama spoke with DW about AI, democracy and ongoing protests against a planned luxury project.
Politics07/02/2026July 2, 202611:43 min
Major protests expected at Germany's AfD party conference<br>Up to 50,000 people are expected to protest the far-right Alternative for Germany’s party conference this weekend.
Politics07/01/2026July 1, 202602:20 min
Ahead of NATO summit, Turkey arrests more than 200 activists<br>Amid a strict ban on public gatherings ahead of the NATO summit in Ankara, 225 activists have already been...