“This
isn’t about trees anymore; it’s about all of the pressure we’re
under from this government. We’re fed up; we don’t like the
direction the country is headed in,”
Turkish police fire tear gas to break up protest against park demolition
The clashes erupted after police carried out a dawn raid against protesters Friday, the second in as many days. Demonstrators are angry at government plans to cut down trees in Gezi Park, next to Taksim Square, to make way for a replica Ottoman army barracks and a shopping mall. They say it is the last green space of any size in the center of Istanbul.
Late
Wednesday the main opposition leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu from the
Republic People’s Party (CHP) made a surprise visit to the protest
camp of several hundred demonstrators and promised that members of
his party would take turns to help the protesters stop an attempt to
bring back the bulldozers.
In
Ankara, the Turkish capital, police also used tear gas to disperse
protesters trying to reach the headquarters of the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP) in support of the anti-government supporters
in Istanbul.
Turkish police fire tear gas to break up protest against park demolition
12
people have been seriously injured and hundreds suffered respiratory
problems after police attacked protesters with tear gas and water
cannon in an attempt to break up an Occupy Gezi Park rally in central
Istanbul
RT,
31
May, 2013
The clashes erupted after police carried out a dawn raid against protesters Friday, the second in as many days. Demonstrators are angry at government plans to cut down trees in Gezi Park, next to Taksim Square, to make way for a replica Ottoman army barracks and a shopping mall. They say it is the last green space of any size in the center of Istanbul.
Six
of the injured are suffering from serious head trauma. A 34-year old
Egyptian tourist is undergoing an operation after suffering a brain
hemorrhage, Huseyin Demirduzen, from the Istanbul Medical Chamber
board, told Reuters. While a member of the opposition Peace and
Democratic Party is in intensive care in a serious condition.
Hundreds
more suffered respiratory problems due to the effects of tear gas,
Demirduzen said. Several people were injured after a wall they were
trying to climb in an attempt to get away from clouds of tear gas
collapsed underneath them.
A
Turkish riot policeman uses tear gas as a demonstrator holds a
banner which reads that, "Chemical Tayyip", referring to
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, during a protest against the
destruction of trees in a park brought about by a pedestrian
project, in Taksim Square in central Istanbul May 31, 2013. (Reuters
/ Murad Sezer)
In
the first raid against crowds on Thursday, police used a Mass
Incident Intervention Vehicle (TOMA) to disperse them before seizing
and burning some of their tents, according to the Hurriyet Daily
News.
The
Peace and Democracy Party described the police intervention as “state
terror” in an e-mailed statement. Amnesty International
also said it was concerned with “the use of excessive
force” by police after what started as a peaceful
protest.
“This
isn’t about trees anymore; it’s about all of the pressure we’re
under from this government. We’re fed up; we don’t like the
direction the country is headed in,” Mert
Burge, an 18 year-old student, who came to support the protesters
after he heard about the use of tear gas via twitter, told Reuters.
Turkish
riot police use water cannon to disperse demonstrators during a
protest against the destruction of trees in a park brought about by
a pedestrian project, in Taksim Square in central Istanbul May 31,
2013. (Reuters / Murad Sezer)
Erdogan
has said he wants to introduce an Ottoman cultural revival. As well
as a more assertive foreign policy, more conservative policies are
also being gradually introduced at home. He is also authorizing
a slew of multi-billion dollar projects aimed at reflecting Turkey’s
reemergence as a major power including a third airport in Istanbul,
which will be one the world’s biggest and a shipping canal as big
as the Suez or Panama canals.
Tayyip
Erdogan defended the decision concerning the Gezi Park,
saying “Whatever you do, we’ve made our decision and we
will implement it, we will revive history there.” Although
the government has denied that the mall is part of the plan,
insisting it needs the space to widen a nearby road and ease traffic
congestion, according to RTE News.
While
the Istanbul deputy of Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Islamist Justice and
Development Party (AKP) Sirin Unal tweeted his support of the
police’s heavy-handed response.
“Obviously
there are some people in need of gas. If you leave there [Taksim
Square] I hope you will have a good day, the system needs to be
obeyed,” he
wrote.
On
May Day police clashed with tens of thousands of demonstrators in
Istanbul and there have been several smaller protests against a
tightening of alcohol sales and displays of public affection as well
the government’s stance on the neighboring Syria conflict.
A
demonstrator covers her face as riot police use tear gas to disperse
the crowd during a protest against the destruction of trees in a
park brought about by a pedestrian project, in Taksim Square in
central Istanbul May 31, 2013. (Reuters / Murad Sezer)
Turkish
riot police use water cannon to disperse demonstrators during a
protest against the destruction of trees in a park brought about by
a pedestrian project, in Taksim Square in central Istanbul May 31,
2013. (Reuters / Osman Orsal)
Turkish
riot police use tear gas to disperse demonstrators during a protest
against the destruction of trees in a park brought about by a
pedestrian project, in Taksim Square in central Istanbul May 31,
2013 (Reuters / Osman Orsal)
A
demonstrator reacts as riot police use a water cannon and tear gas
to disperse the crowd during a protest against the destruction of
trees in a park brought about by a pedestrian project, in Taksim
Square in central Istanbul May 31, 2013 (Reuters / Murad Sezer)
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