Monday, June 03, 2013
Thousands take to streets in Turkey, clash with police
By Jonathon Burch and Humeyra Pamuk
ISTANBUL/ANKARA (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people took to
the streets in Turkey's four biggest cities on Sunday and clashed with
riot police firing tear gas on the third day of the fiercest
anti-government demonstrations in years.
The
din of car horns and residents banging pots and pans from balconies in
support of the protests resonated across neighbourhoods in Istanbul and
Ankara late into the night, as hundreds of demonstrators skirmished with
riot police.
Roads around Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's office
in Istanbul were sealed off as police fired tear gas to push back
protesters, and police raided a shopping complex in the centre of the
capital Ankara where they believed demonstrators were sheltering,
detaining several hundred.
Erdogan blamed the main secular
opposition party for inciting the crowds, whom he called "a few
looters", and said the protests were aimed at depriving his ruling AK
Party of votes as elections begin next year.
Interior Minister
Muammer Guler said there had been more than 200 demonstrations in 67
cities around the country, according to the Hurriyet newspaper.
The
unrest erupted on Friday when trees were torn down at a park in
Istanbul's main Taksim Square under government plans to redevelop the
area, but widened into a broad show of defiance against the
Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP).
Erdogan said
the plans to remake the square, long an iconic rallying point for mass
demonstrations, would go ahead, including the construction of a new
mosque and the rebuilding of a replica Ottoman-era barracks.
He said the protests had nothing to do with the plans.
"It's entirely ideological," he said in an interview broadcast on Turkish television.
"The
main opposition party which is making resistance calls on every street
is provoking these protests ... This is about my ruling party, myself
and the looming municipal elections in Istanbul and efforts to make the
AK Party lose votes here."
Turkey is due to hold local and
presidential elections next year in which Erdogan is expected to stand,
followed by parliamentary polls in 2015.
The main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) denied orchestrating the unrest, blaming Erdogan's policies.
"Today
the people on the street across Turkey are not exclusively from the
CHP, but from all ideologies and from all parties," senior party member
Mehmet Akif Hamzacebi said.
"What Erdogan has to do is not to blame CHP but draw the necessary lessons from what happened," he told Reuters.
WIDE SPECTRUM
The
protests, started by a small group of environmental campaigners,
mushroomed when police used force to eject them from the park on Taksim
Square.
As word spread online, the demonstrations drew in a wide
range of people of all ages from across the political and social
spectrum.
The ferocity of the police response in Istanbul 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
fired tear gas canisters into residential neighbourhoods and police
used tear gas to try to smoke people out of buildings. Footage on
YouTube showed one protester being hit by an armoured police truck as it
charged a barricade.
For much of Sunday, the atmosphere in
Taksim Square was festive, with some people chanting for Erdogan to
resign and others dancing. There was little obvious police presence.
But
in the nearby Besiktas neighbourhood, riot police fired tear gas and
water cannons to keep crowds away from Erdogan's office in Dolmabahce
Palace, a former Ottoman residence on the shores of the Bosphorus.
There were similar scenes in Ankara's main Kizilar square.
Erdogan
is due to fly to Morocco on Monday as part of an official visit that
also covers Algeria and Tunisia. Sources in his office said his trip
would go ahead.
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 Turkey'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.
Tighter restrictions on alcohol sales
and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have
also provoked protests. Concern that government policy is allowing
Turkey to be dragged into the conflict in neighbouring Syria by the West
has also led to peaceful demonstrations.
On Sunday, Erdogan
appeared on television for the fourth time in less than 36 hours, and
justified the restrictions on alcohol as for the good of people's
health.
"I want them to know that I want these (restrictions) for
the sake of their health ... Whoever drinks alcohol is an alcoholic,"
he said.
(Additional reporting by Can Sezer in Istanbul, Umit
Bektas, Orhan Coskun and Parisa Hafezi in Ankara; Writing by Nick
Tattersall and Humeyra Pamuk; editing by Mike Collett-White)
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
Thestar online
Monday 3 June 2013.
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