Turkey launches first driverless metro line in Istanbul

Turkey launches first driverless metro line in Istanbul
Turkey launches its first driverless metro line on Friday, an eagerly awaited project expected to relieve congestion in a traffic-choked area of Istanbul.

2 min read
16 December, 2017
Erdogan opened the country's first driverless metro on Friday [AFP]

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan opened the country's first driverless metro line on Friday, an eagerly awaited project expected to relieve congestion in a traffic-choked area of Istanbul.

The new metro line connects Uskudar on the Asian side of Istanbul with the residential and business area of Umraniye, also on the Asian side, bringing relief to Istanbul residents who for years have endured sometimes unimaginable traffic.

"We are coming closer, step by step, to the goal of ridding Istanbul of vehicle traffic," Erdogan said before riding on the first journey along the line.

"The inauguration of this metro is the best response to those who try to push our country into a corner by using the economy as a weapon."

Erdogan is already gearing up for November 2019 legislative and presidential elections and a host of new infrastructure projects are being prepared across the country.

The president, a former mayor of Istanbul, has already presided over an era of transformation for the city since his ruling party came to power in 2002, with a new bridge across the Bosphorus and two tunnels under the iconic strait.

The line will soon be extended by several more stations further out to the east and eventually connect with Istanbul's far-flung second airport Sabiha Gokcen.

More metro lines are expected to be opened in the next years as Erdogan seeks to bolster his image as a politician who can realise his self-proclaimed "crazy projects".

Other projects also include a massive third airport for Istanbul due to open next year. Further ahead, a bridge across the Dardanelles Straits is planned and, even more ambitiously, a Panama-style artificial shipping canal in Istanbul.

Agencies contributed to this report.