Enes Freedom is no longer under contract in the NBAsince the Houston Rockets fired him shortly after acquiring him through a trade with the Boston Celtics last season. Freedom, who bore the name Enes Kanter for many years and remained so well known to most basketball fans, was always a solid offensive player and a consistent rebounder.
His declining offensive performance and poor defense may not have been the only reasons he hasn’t received an offer from a team since his layoff.
500,000 euros bounty from Turkey for Enes Freedom
Freedom suspects his figure as a political activist and vocal critic Chinas plays a role in his unemployment and claims that the NBA only stands by the players when it benefits them financially. The Center has always been very vocal on political and human rights issues, not least because of his own involvement in the politics of his native Turkey.
In 2017, Freedom was detained in Romania after his passport was canceled by the Turkish embassy because Freedom refused Turkish President Recep Erdogan had criticized. Freedom was eventually released and able to return to the US, however Turkey has issued an arrest warrant against him for allegedly being a member of a terrorist organization.
The longtime NBA professional then immediately applied for US citizenship, which he was granted in 2021. Now the contractless center has been added to a new Turkey list of most wanted terrorists, which comes with Turkey putting a $500,000 bounty on his head, the New York Post reports.
Freedom: “Turkish government hates this”
“That’s what makes it so dangerous for me,” Freedom told the Post. “Before the bounty, Turkish intelligence was after the people on the list, but now everyone is after them because they want the money.” Government hates that. They’re really sick of it and they said ‘enough is enough’ and they’re doing everything they can to shut me up.”
The athlete’s name is on Turkey’s wanted list for terrorists along with actual terrorists and other dissidents critical of the Erdoğan regime, which routinely flouts international human rights law. The list also includes more than a dozen journalists – part of a wider attack on press freedom in Turkey, where the number of jailed journalists has doubled over the past year.
Freedom also said the bounty on his head meant he needed protection and was in constant contact with law enforcement and the FBI. “I’ll be around the clock protected. Speaking up because I’m not the only one on this list,” Freedom said of the bounty. “There are so many journalists, so many activists, and so many athletes, but they’re not as well known as I am. They’re a lot easier targets – and they’re out there alone.”