Tag Archives: turkey

Ahmet-AtakanAhmet Atakan, 22,  who was killed on Monday night during a confrontation with police in the Turkish city of Antakya

Rónán Burtenshaw writes:

 

The Turkish protests have seen a major escalation in the last few days. Protests at ODTÜ in Ankara and by the Alevite community in Tuzluçayır culminated in a sixth death on Monday. Tuesday then saw mass demonstrations across Turkey in memory of Ahmet Atakan, marking the biggest single day of activity since early summer.
…If commentators were predicting the petering out of the Gezi Park resistance then September will have given them a surprise. The movement seems in better shape to build towards the new year than it seemed a month ago. The latest wave will need to survive what is likely to be a significant escalation in state violence and develop beyond mass protests into efficient, democratic structures in communities and workplaces. If it can then it seems likely that the government is in for a long autumn and winter.

 

Sixth death as trouble renews (Rabble.ie)

drone

Jenk K sez:

Tuesday afternoon on June 11th 2013, Police fired bullets at RC controlled flying camera during the protests in Taksim square, Istanbul. Police aimed directly at the camera.Unfortunately the last video was not saved properly on the memory card due to the impact of the bullet. The camera and the helicopter are completely broken.Here is the footage from that camera! This footage you are about to see is from the previous flights minutes before the incident.

(Hat tip: Mark Malone)

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Turkey9_68128758_12junecopyScenes from the last 12 hours. After two weeks of protest in Taksim Square, Istanbul, Turkey, riot police used tear gas and water cannons to move thousands of anti-government protesters from the square.  The BBC report an uneasy calm in the city today

Previously: Meanwhile, In Ballsbridge

Saturday Night In The Suburbs 

9 shocking photos from Istanbul’s escalating protests (The Week)

(BBC)

Pics: (From top) Reuters/Osman Orsal; Reuters/Yannis Behrakis; AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis; Reuters/Murad Sezer; Reuters/Yannis Behrakis; Reuters/Yannis Behrakis; Reuters/Murad Sezer; Reuters/Osman Orsal; Reuters/Yannis Behrakis.

largest1ISTANBUL-articleLargeb9d66_130607140431-04-turkey-0607-horizontal-galleryThe camp at Taksim Gezi Park in Taksim Square, in Istanbul, Turkey, where plans to replace the park with a shopping mall sparked an uprising.

Two young Irish journalists Ronan Burtenshaw and Tommy Gavin have been reporting from Istanbul for Rabble.ie since the protests began.

Here, they recap the events of the past seven days and describe the animal-friendly life at the camp.

Until recently conversation in Gezi Park was focused on the trees. This is one of the few remaining green spaces in this city of fourteen million.

Activists organised by Greenpeace had been camping there in rotation since December. They were there to prevent the government from following through on its plan to demolish the park and build a shopping mall in its place.

When bulldozers arrived on May 29th and were followed on May 30th by the first in a series of brutal police crackdowns numbers grew to hundreds and then thousands.

What began as a question of green space in a densely popukated urban area grew to a movement that gave expression to grievances with the conservatism, authoritarianism and neoliberalism of the AKP government.

But until May 31 nobody really believed that the demolition of the park could be stopped.

That morning police again raided the camp, using an egregious amount of tear gas in the commercial centre of the city. Worse still they herded demonstrators into Taksim metro station, firing gas cannisters after them and locking the doors.

The attack caused the first of at least three deaths during the uprising, with thousands more injured.

Public indignation at this violence saw Gezi become a symbol of resistance and the centre of a new anti-government movement.

Saturday saw the first mass mobilisations – hundreds of thousands in Istanbul, where crowds marched from the Asian side at dawn, and over a million across Turkey.

The size of the crowds on Saturday forced authorities to pull back from Taksim Square and Gezi Park that evening.

Although clashes have continued at the fringes, and in close by flashpoints Besiktas and Gazi Mallehesi, the police have not returned to Taksim – which protestors have fortified with barricades.

Today Gezi Park is liberated communal space.

While Prime Minister Erdogan insists that it will be demolished and replaced with a shopping mall, protestors build structures for a long-term occupation.

Thousands sleep there in tents every night amid a festive atmosphere.

An ever-expanding supply centre manned by young volunteers distributes the donations – food, water, blankets, gas masks – which arrive every hour.

Groups give their time to organise activities: comedy shows, yoga, volleyball matches, gardening, face-painting, a creche. There’s even a vet.

A platform has been set up to co-ordinate political activities – offering space for those who are in parties and the majority who are not to discuss and co-operate.

They have coalesced around five demands: keep Gezi as a park, sack the heads of the police force who led the crackdown, ban the use of tear gas, release all those arrested during the protests and end restrictions on the use of public spaces for political activity.

The platform have called a demonstration for 4pm local (2pm Irish) tomorrow in Taksim Square.

With the threat of forcible police eviction still hanging over the camp much depends on whether they can match last weekend’s numbers.

Amnesty International Ireland is holding a rally in solidarity with the Turkish protestors at the Embassy of Turkey in Raglan Road, Dublin, on Wednesday at 1pm.

Ronan and Tommy’s reports from Istanbul (Rabble.ie)

Dublin Turkish Embassy Protest (Facebook)

(Getty, AP, Reuters)

ankara-capital-geziparki-protest-9Protestors in Ankara, Turkey, last night

Reuben & Gielty write:

We are a couple of freelance journos blogging the events in Istanbul for Rabble.ie.
This is our most recent report and we’ve been uploading stuff daily, live tweeting at @wearerabble and uploading videos using a YouTube account called giongielty, all the interview-recording, coddling and writing off smartphones…We’d obviously like to reach as wide an audience as possible to help highlight what is happening here.

 

Tales From Taksim Mall (Rabble.ie)

Turkish protest leaders meet Erdogan deputy as turmoil continues (Washington Post)
(Reuters)