Turkey
protests continue as US voices concern about police use of force
Following
fifth day of demonstrations, Turkish PM lashes out at critics and
John Kerry calls for restraint.
3
June, 2013
The
US has called for an investigation into the political violence in
Turkey and urged restraint on all sides following the fifth day of
escalating nationwide protests against the rule of the prime
minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In remarks that are likely to provoke Erdogan, the US secretary of state, John Kerry, said: "We are concerned by the reports of excessive use of force by police. We obviously hope that there will be a full investigation of those incidents and full restraint from the police force."
Earlier
on Monday, Erdogan warned protesters against taking the country's
political disputes on to the streets, signalling he could mobilise
his mass popular support to crush the demonstrations.
As
sporadic clashes between protesters and riot police continued in
Izmir, Ankara and Istanbul, and the first death was confirmed,
Erdogan lashed out at his critics, delivering an uncompromising
message after a week of the worst violent turmoil of his decade in
power.
Erdogan's
Justice and Development party (AKP) took just over half the national
vote in the last elections in 2011. Invoking that mandate, the prime
minister said: "There is 50% and we can barely keep them at
home. But we have called on them to calm down."
Erdogan
gave similar warnings on Saturday in his first response to the
turmoil that saw the centre of Istanbul turned into a battleground
over the weekend as hundreds of thousands of people across the
country took to the streets enraged at heavy-handing riot police
handling of a demonstration last Friday.
The
turmoil started a week ago as a small environmental protest in an
Istanbul park against redevelopment plans, but quickly mushroomed
into huge weekend clashes with riot police in the city and across
half the country after police mounted tear gas and water cannon
attacks on peaceful civilians. The focus of the protest shifted from
the building project to the person of the prime minister.
Erdogan's
dismissive attitude to the mass demonstrations contrasted
increasingly with President Abdullah Gul, who sounded conciliatory
and pointedly rebutted Erdogan's message. "Democracy does not
mean elections alone," he said, in what appeared to be a sharp
riposte to the prime minister's repeated insistence on the strength
of his parliamentary mandate.
"There
can be nothing more natural for the expression of various views,
various situations and objections through a variety of ways, besides
elections," the president said.
The
prime minister has challenged the rights of the initial protesters in
a central Istanbul park to launch a sit-in opposing a redevelopment
scheme demolishing the green space to make way for a shopping
complex, mosque, and a replica of an old military barracks.
Government
data showed 1,500 arrests in Ankara, 300 in Izmir, and another 370 in
the southern town of Adana. The impact of the sudden eruption of
political turbulence was also felt by Turkey's business community in
what has been one of the world's fastest-growing economies in recent
years. Istanbul's stock exchange fell by 10.47%, the worst one-day
decline in a decade. The prime minister brushed off the news. "Bourse
indexes increase and decrease, they are not always stable. When we
came to power, the National 100 Index was around 11,000. It might
increase to 100,000 tomorrow."
An
Istanbul professor and one of his students both lost eyes when police
hit them in the face with tear gas canisters on Sunday night, it was
confirmed.
In
a further sign of spreading instability, the Turkish military said
there had been an exchange of fire between its forces and Kurdish
guerrillas of the Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK) in Sirnak, in the
south-east. The two sides have been observing a ceasefire as the PKK
stages a withdrawal from Turkey into northern Iraq as part of an
incipient peace process since the start of the year. The reported
clash was the first known breach of the truce. The army claim could
not be corroborated.
Kerry's expression of concern about the response by the Turkish authorities was followed by a series of rebukes across Washington on Monday as the US sought to distance itself from one of its most important regional allies over the affair.
White
House spokesman Jay Carney said the US had "serious concerns
about the reports of excessive use of force by police and large
numbers of injuries and damage to property".
The
protests come at an awkward time for the US which is trying to
convince the international community that governments in Syria and
Iran do not respect the rights of their citizens while the
Turkish-backed rebels in Syria represent a more democratic
alternative.
Tensions
remained high in Istanbul on Monday, with protesters still commanding
the rebellion's focal point, Taksim Square. Trade unions are
threatening to mobilise a general strike and several Turkish
universities have postponed final examinations – a move seen as
encouraging the students to take part in the wave of protest without
jeopardising their academic prospects.
The prime minister blamed the sudden eruption of protest against him on unspecified foreign powers or elements. "Our intelligence work is ongoing," he said. "It is not possible to reveal their names … We shall be discussing these with them and will be following up, in fact we will also settle accounts with them."
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