Turkey's
leader climbs on bus, lambasts protesters
In a series of increasingly belligerent speeches to cheering supporters Sunday, Turkey's prime minister launched a verbal attack on the tens of thousands of anti-government protesters who flooded the streets for a 10th day, accusing them of creating an environment of terror.
9
June 2013 Last updated at 18:53 GMT
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan made the most inflammatory of his speeches as he
arrived in the capital, Ankara. Erdogan belittled the protesters,
again calling them "capulcu," the Turkish word for looters
or vandals. He made his speech in Ankara on an open-top bus, which
then drove into the city in a motorcade.
"If
you look in the dictionary, you will see how right a description this
is," Erdogan said, speaking to thousands of supporters who
greeted him at the airport. "Those who burn and destroy are
called capulcu. Those who back them are of the same family."
The
increasingly fiery tone could inflame tensions, with protesters in
both Ankara and the country's largest city, Istanbul, remaining on
the streets. Protests have been held in at least 78 cities across the
country so far.
On
two occasions, including one in the southern city of Adana Saturday
night, clashes have been reported between Erdogan supporters and
protesters.
"All
they do is to break and destroy, to attack public buildings ... They
didn't stop at that," Erdogan said. "They attacked
daughters who wear headscarves. They entered Dolmabahce mosque with
their beer bottles and their shoes."
Some
of the injured in the initial clashes in Istanbul's Besiktas area
were treated in Dolmabahce mosque. The mosque's imam has denied
reports that people entered with beer. In the initial days of the
protests, some women said they were harassed verbally. The majority
of protesters however, have denounced those who did it and have been
welcoming toward them.
Anti-government
protesters have turned Erdogan's label of them as "capulcu"
into a humorous retort, printing stickers with the word, scrawling it
on their tents and uploading music videos onto social network sites.
Erdogan
had earlier visited another two cities where unrest had occurred and
made speeches again condemning his detractors. He planned more
speeches in a day that looked much like an election candidate on the
campaign trail.
After
the speech, crowds at Istanbul's Taksim Square swelled, with several
tens of thousands packing into the square. Thousands more flooded
Ankara's central square, a day after police used tear gas and water
cannons to oust them from the area.
Erdogan's
refusal to moderate his tone caused dismay.
"As
the prime minister continues (with) his harsh style, the resistance
also continues and is getting bigger," said Cagdas Ersoy, a
23-year-old student who joined the protests in Ankara's Kizilay
square. "He is making the resistance bigger without realizing
it."
Protester
Cihan Akburun said: "He should not provoke the people. We invite
everyone to (have) common sense."
Erdogan
challenged the protesters as the ballot box.
"It's
not these marginal groups, but the people, who are going to call us
to account, and they are going to do it at the ballot box. The people
brought us here (through elections) and it's the people who will vote
us out. Apart from the people, no one has the power to oust us,"
he said.
"Stand
firm, don't yield, Turkey is with you," his supporters chanted
in return.
The
nationwide anti-government protests were sparked by outrage over
police use of force against an environmental protest in Istanbul's
Taksim Square on May 31, and have grown into a display of discontent
toward Erdogan's government.
The
protests have attracted a diverse crowd from a variety of social
backgrounds and age groups. Many accuse the prime minister of
becoming increasingly authoritarian after 10 years in power and of
trying to impose his conservative, religious mores in the country
which is governed by secular laws.
Erdogan
has rejected the accusations, insisting he respects all lifestyles
and is the "servant" of his people.
Three
people have died in the protests, including a police officer in Adana
who fell into an underpass that was under construction while chasing
demonstrators. More than 4,300 protesters have sought medical
treatment, human rights groups have said.
Thousands
of protesters have occupied Taksim and its Gezi Park, where the
protests began over objections to Erdogan's plan to develop the park
by building a replica Ottoman barracks and a shopping mall. The mall
idea has since been dropped, and has been replaced by possibilities
of an opera house, theater and museum.
Erdogan,
referring to the crowd of thousands of supporters before him, said:
"The whole of Turkey should look at Ankara. They should not look
at those who are wreaking terrorism."
He
again made obscure references to an "interest rates lobby"
as being involved in the protests, saying that they would be made to
account "heavily." For those who might speculate on the
financial markets, he said: "If we catch you speculating, we
will strangle you."
The
prime minister accused the anti-government protesters of killing
policemen and said hundreds of police had been injured. So far, only
one police death has been confirmed officially - that of the officer
who fell into the underpass.
Earlier
in the day, he gave a speech in Adana, where pro- and anti-government
protesters clashed Saturday night, according to the state-run Anadolu
Agency.
"We
won't do what a handful of looters have done. They burn and destroy.
... They destroy the shops of civilians. They destroy the cars of
civilians," he told supporters at Adana airport. "They are
low enough to insult the prime minister of this country."
He
urged his supporters to avoid violence themselves and predicted that
his Islamic-rooted party would defeat his opponents during local
elections in March.
"I
want you to give them the first lesson through democratic means in
the ballot box," he said.
Erdogan
has repeatedly branded the protests as illegal efforts to discredit
his government before local elections next year. He frequently refers
to the 50 percent majority he received in elections in 2011 to
dismiss the protest as attempts by a minority group to dominate over
a majority of his supporters
Police
commit suicide
From
RT
"09:51
GMT: Six policemen have committed suicide since the Gezi Park
protests started, Hurriyet daily reported, quoting Faruk Sezer, the
head of the Emniyet-Sen police union. Sezer admitted that the police
force has come under fierce criticism over how they handled the
protests – but also said they had been forced to work under severe
conditions. "
Doctor Talks About What is Happening in Ankara / Turkey
"Even during the wars, there are ethical principles to follow. You never attack hospitals and infirmaries, the Turkish Police went beyond this line."
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