Is Turkey next in line for an Arab Spring? Protesters defiant, as unrest in Turkey enters third day
June 2, 2013 – TURKEY – Protesters
lit fires and scuffled with police in parts of Istanbul and Ankara
early on Sunday, but the streets were generally quieter after two days
of Turkey’s fiercest anti-government demonstrations for years. Hundreds
of protesters set fires in the Tunali district of the capital Ankara,
while riot police fired tear gas and pepper spray to hold back groups of
stone-throwing youths near Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s office in
Istanbul. Istanbul’s central Taksim Square, where the protests have been
focused, was quieter after riot police pulled back their armored trucks
late on Saturday. Demonstrators lit bonfires among overturned vehicles,
broken glass and rocks and played cat-and-mouse on side streets with
riot police, who fired occasional volleys of tear gas. The unrest was
triggered by protests against government plans to build a replica
Ottoman-era barracks to house shops or apartments in Taksim, long a
venue for political protest. But it has widened into a broader show of
defiance against Erdogan and his Islamist-rooted Justice and Development
Party (AKP). Interior Minister Muammer Guler said on Saturday that 939
people had been arrested in more than 90 separate demonstrations around
the country. More than 1,000 people have been injured in Istanbul and
several hundred more in Ankara, according to medics. The ferocity of the
police response has shocked Turks, as well as tourists caught up in the
unrest in one of the world’s most visited destinations. It has drawn
rebukes from the United States, European Union and international rights
groups. Helicopters have fired tear gas canisters into residential
neighborhoods and police have used tear gas to try to smoke people out
of buildings. Footage on YouTube showed one protester being hit by an
armored police truck as it charged a barricade. “All dictators use the
same methods, oppressing their people,” said Mehmet Haspinar, a
60-year-old retired government employee sheltering in a building
entrance way as riot police fired pepper spray in an Ankara back street.
Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in
power, turning its once crisis-prone economy into the fastest-growing in
Europe. He remains by far the country’s most popular politician, but
critics point to what they see as his authoritarianism and religiously
conservative meddling in private lives in the secular republic. Some
accuse him of behaving like a modern-day sultan. Tighter restrictions on
alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in
recent weeks have provoked protests. Concern that government policy is
allowing Turkey to be dragged into the conflict in neighboring Syria by
the West has also led to peaceful demonstrations. “It’s about democracy,
and it’s going to get bigger,” said one demonstrator in a side street
off Taksim Square, trying to rinse tear gas from his eyes. Erdogan has
called for an immediate end to the protests and has said his government
will investigate claims that the police have used excessive force. But
he remained defiant. “If this is about holding meetings, if this is a
social movement, where they gather 20, I will get up and gather 200,000
people. Where they gather 100,000, I will bring together one million
from my party,” he said in a televised speech. –Reuters
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