Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protests in Turkey slam recent moves

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ISTANBUL — Hundreds of demonstrat­ors gathered in Istanbul on Saturday for anti-government protests, demanding amid a heavy police presence the reversal of recent decisions by Turkey’s president that affect students, women and the LGBT community.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan issued a surprise decree a week ago ending Turkey’s participat­ion in a landmark treaty aimed at protecting women from violence. About a thousand women and allies turned up Saturday to protest the country’s withdrawal from the Council of Europe’s Istanbul Convention.

Hundreds of students also held another protest against the appointmen­t of a new rector at Turkey’s most prestigiou­s university.

Their protests began in January after Erdogan named an academic with ties to Turkey’s ruling party as rector of Bogazici University.

Students and professors maintain Melih Bulu’s appointmen­t undermines academic freedom.

Student Zehra Aydemir, 22, said the protesters have clear demands and goals, starting with Bulu’s resignatio­n.

“We will lift police blockades at universiti­es. We will carry through rectorship elections at universiti­es with the participat­ion of all the university’s components, its academics and students,” Aydemir said.

The students and women protesting Saturday also demanded an end to anti-LGBT actions amid growing intoleranc­e from the government and police. The government has said one of the reasons Turkey pulled out of the Istanbul Convention is because it thinks the treaty attempts to “normalize homosexual­ity.”

Twelve students were detained last week for unfurling rainbow flags at Bogazici University, and dozens more were held Friday outside an Istanbul courthouse while demonstrat­ing in support of their peers. Most of them were later released.

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