The organisations were told about the government decision yesterday evening, when police raided their offices and collected their records.
The Interior Ministry said 153 of the organisations had alleged ties to the Gulen network, 190 to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, eight to the Islamic State group and 19 to the banned far-left Revolutionary People's Liberation Army-Front, or DHKP-C.
Lawyers at the left-wing People's Law Bureau resisted the raid, and their door was broken down by armed special forces who cleared the offices, detained four lawyers and changed the office's locks. The four were released today morning.
"There is serious suppression against any form of oppositional organization, association or any sort of group. We were expecting it," she said.
Turkey has come under intense criticism from opposition groups and its allies over its crackdown on dissenting voices during the state of emergency declared after the July 15 coup.
Close to 37,000 people have been arrested, more than 100,000 people dismissed or suspended from government jobs, and 170 media outlets and scores of businesses and associations have been shut down over alleged ties to terrorist organizations.
Mehmet Onur Yilmaz of children's rights organization Gundem Cocuk told the AP they weren't given a reason either for their shutdown but noted that his group had filed annual reports on child abuse, warning the government of its shortcomings.
"We would like a Turkey where none of that exists of course, but what they want is a Turkey where none of this is visible," he added.
"Yes, we are in a period of state of emergency, but we are acting within the legal limits afforded us by the state of emergency," he said, adding that any mistakes would be rectified.
In the German city of Cologne, 20,000 protesters marched today against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his government's crackdown on dissent.
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