The Arizona Republic

Protests in Turkey enter 2nd day; 900 detained

- By Suzan Fraser and Bulut Emiroglu

ISTANBUL, Turkey — In a scene reminiscen­t of the Arab Spring, thousands of people on Saturday flooded Istanbul’s main square after a crackdown on an anti-government protest turned city streets into a battlefiel­d clouded by tear gas.

Although he offered some concession­s to demonstrat­ors, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan remained largely defiant in the face of the biggest popular challenge to his power in a decade in office, insisting that the protests are undemocrat­ic and illegitima­te.

Public anger has flared among urban and secular Turks after police violently broke up an anti-developmen­t sit-in in the landmark Taksim Square, with protests spreading to dozens of other cities as demonstrat­ors denounced what they see as Erdogan’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian style.

As the furious protests entered their second day, police fired tear gas and turned on water cannons at angry demonstrat­ors, some of whom threw rocks and bottles on their march toward Taksim. In an area normally abuzz with tourists, stores were shuttered and protesters fled into luxury hotels for shelter. There were hundreds of people arrested and injured.

Turkish authoritie­s later removed barricades and allowed thousands of demonstrat­ors into the square in an effort to calm tension.

Sounding defiant even as he bowed to protesters and pulled back police, Erdogan promised to stick to the government’s redevelopm­ent plans — which protesters fear will remove one of the few green spaces in the sprawling city.

He called the protesters a “minority” that was trying to forcefully impose demands and challenged the opposition that he could easily summon a million people for a government rally.

“I am not claiming that a government that has received the majority of the votes has limitless powers ... and can do whatever it wants,” Erdogan said in a televised speech. “Just as the majority cannot impose its will on the minority, the minority cannot impose its will on the majority.”

Under Erdogan’s leadership, Turkey has boosted economic growth and raised its internatio­nal profile, taking a central role in post-Arab Spring politics in the region.

Though widely supported by rural and conservati­ve Muslims, he remains a divisive figure in mainly secular circles and is criticized for his often abrasive style.

Hundreds of people were injured in the protests, including four who permanentl­y lost their eyesight after being hit by gas canisters or plastic bullets, Huseyin Demirdizen of Turkey’s Doctors’ Associatio­n told the Associated Press. He said at least two people injured in the protests are in lifethreat­ening condition.

Interior Minister Muammer Güler said more than 900 people were detained during the protests but that some of them were released after questionin­g. He did not say how many were still in custody. The protest had spread to 48 cities, he added.

The mood at Taksim after Erdogan called off the police was cheerful. Protesters chanted “Tayyip resign!” Turkish celebritie­s joined the crowds, with thousands milling around the square, waving flags, and cheering and clapping at anti-gov- ernment speeches. Many drank beer in protest of newly enacted alcohol curbs, singing, “Cheers, Tayyip!”

Private NTV television reported that protesters built barricades at entrances to the square to prevent police from returning.

Although scenes at the square brought to mind Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the center of an uprising that ended Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak’s rule, the protests were not likely bring down Erdogan’s government, one analyst said.

The protests were more of a warning, according to Ahmet Cigdem, a professor of sociology and political science at Ankara’s Gazi University.

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