The raids were ordered just a month before Turks vote in a parliamentary election expected to result in victory and a third consecutive term for Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan`s Justice and Development Party, known as the AK Party.
Among those held, according to Dogan news agency and state-run Anatolian, were three musicians, all members of a protest folk band called Grup Yorum.
The police launched three raids simultaneously on the offices of the Okmeydani Rights and Freedoms Organisation, the Youth Organisation`s Federation and the Idil Culture Centre, used by Grup Yorum.
A lawyer for the detainees told Dogan that they were suspected of having connections with the ultra-leftist DHKP-C movement.
The DHKP-C was blamed for a suicide attack in 2001 that killed two police and a tourist in Istanbul`s central Taksim Square.
Critics, citing the Islamist background of leaders like Erdogan, fear the AK intends to roll back modern Turkey`s traditional secularism.
Others liken the party to a Muslim version of Europe`s Christian Democrats, liberal on economic issues and conservative on social matters.
The arrest of scores of journalists in recent months on suspicion of links to an alleged network of militant secularists, dubbed Ergenekon, has raised concerns about press freedom in European Union-candidate Turkey.
Hundreds more people have been held without trial in connection with the sprawling Ergenekon investigation, which began in 2007.
There was initial public support for the investigation from Turks tired of seeing elected governments toppled by military coups, but that waned as doubts set in over whether prosecutors were using their powers to silence critics of the AK.
Going into the election, there are fears of an upsurge in violence involving militant Kurdish separatists. The Kurdistan Workers` Party (PKK) claimed responsibility last week for an attack on police as they escorted an AK party campaign bus after a rally held by Erdogan in northern Turkey. (*)
Editor: Kunto Wibisono
Copyright © ANTARA 2011