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Turkey’s Protests Continue: Dictator Resign

Turkey’s Protests Continue: Dictator Resign
folder_openTurkey access_time10 years ago
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Local Editor

Turkey's government faced growing pressure on Monday after angry demonstrators clashed for a third night with police in a nationwide wave of protests.


Turkey’s Protests Continue: Dictator Resign Police fired tear gas and water cannon Sunday at protesters who marched on Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's offices in Istanbul and Ankara.
"Dictator, resign!... We will resist until we win," yelled the crowds, in the latest of a string of protests that have by some accounts left hundreds injured.

This comes as police had withdrawn on Saturday from Istanbul's main Taksim Square, the symbolic heart of demonstrations that started over an unpopular building project nearby and boiled over into a general protest against the government.

Crowds of whistling, flag-waving protestors continued to cover Taksim Square but the flashpoint shifted late Sunday to the area near Erdogan's nearby Istanbul base.
Meanwhile, witnesses said police disperse thousands of demonstrators and incidents continued into early Monday.
Interior Minister Muammer Guler said earlier that more than 1,700 people had been arrested in the unrest nationwide, though most have since been released.
He said 58 civilians and 115 security officers had been injured over several days of protests, although rights groups have put the number of injured higher.

A doctors' union in Ankara said more than 400 civilians had been injured there including some with serious head wounds.
Rights groups have denounced the violence that police meted out to demonstrators and Turkey's Western allies have appealed for restraint.

The unrest began as a local outcry against plans to redevelop Gezi Park, a rare green spot near Taksim, but after a heavy-handed police response the protests spread to other districts -- and then to dozens of cities across Turkey.
Accused by critics of pushing an increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda, Erdogan's government is facing the biggest protests since it took power in 2002.
Erdogan on Sunday renewed his call for an end to the disturbances.
"If you love this country, if you love Istanbul, do not fall for these games," he said in televised comments.

For his part, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu warned in a Twitter message: "The continuation of these protests... will bring no benefits but will harm the reputation of our country which is admired both in the region and the world."
The prime minister had insisted on Saturday that his government would press ahead with the park redevelopment.
He also admitted "some mistakes" in the police response and called off the police from Taksim on Saturday.

Amnesty International said some protesters had been left blinded by the massive quantities of tear gas and pepper spray used by police.
Human Rights Watch said the number of injured was higher than official figures suggested and that one protester had lost an eye after police shot him with a plastic bullet.

Turkey's NATO allies Britain, France and the United States have all urged the Erdogan government to exercise restraint.
Turkey's southeastern neighbor Iraq on Sunday warned of the implications for the region.
"Adopting violence will cause it to spread, which will affect the situation in the region," said Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in an emailed statement.
"We call for restraint and for avoiding violence."

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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