Plain clothes police officers detain an anti-government protester at Taksim square in central IstanbulVia Daren Butler ISTANBUL (Reuters) – Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's executive purged lots of of law enforcement officials overnight, media mentioned, as part of a crackdown on a rival he accuses of trying to usurp state power by means of tarring him with a specious corruption investigation. Some of the officers, who integrated participants of the monetary and organized crime, smuggling and anti-terrorism units, had been moved to visitors obligations, in step with the reviews. Ankara police, chief center of attention of the motion, declined to remark. Erdogan, going through the most important problem of an eleven-year rule that has seen the army banished from politics, the financial system booming and Ankara pressing its role in the Middle East, portrays the raids and arrests as a "dirty plot" by an Islamic cleric.