Turkey arrests head of opposition newspaper
Backsliding' on fundamental rights
Cumhuriyet's exiled former editor-in-chief, Can Dundar, fled to Germany earlier this year while appealing against a prison term for revealing state secrets.
Dundar was given nearly six years behind bars for a story about a shipment of arms intercepted at the Syrian border, which had prompted a furious Erdogan to warn him he would "pay a heavy price".
Among the nine to be held ahead of trial were Cumhuriyet's editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu, celebrated cartoonist Musa Kart and influential anti-Erdogan columnist Kadri Gursel.
However, two columnists were released on bail on health grounds and because of their age, while two other suspects from the newspaper's accounting department were released without charge.
The suspects are charged with links to the Kurdish militant Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the movement of US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen, blamed for the failed coup bid. Gulen denies the accusations.
In its latest report on Turkey's long-stalled EU bid, the bloc said on Wednesday that it had serious concerns over "backsliding in the area of rule of law and fundamental rights."
Turkey blasted the report saying it was "far from objective".
Meanwhile Friday authorities in Turkey's Kurdish-majority southeast said a bomb blast had killed a local government official and wounded at least two other people.
The explosion, which state-run Anadolu news agency blamed on the PKK, tore through the area near a government building in the town of Derik on Thursday.
Also Friday a French journalist was detained while on a reporting trip to the southeastern Gaziantep province, his employer said.
Olivier Bertrand was "detained without reason,"! Isabelle Roberts of online media Les Jours told AFP, adding: "We demand his immediate release .. We are very worried, we are waiting for news."
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