Scores detained in Turkey police swoop

Police in Turkey have arrested 87 people following raids across several cities, local media says.

Muammer Guler, the country’s interior minister, said 62 people have been arrested in Turkey’s biggest city Istanbul while many others were detained in the capital Ankara.

NTV television said the raids targeted left-wing groups.The arrests followed two weeks of anti-government protests.

Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Istanbul, said the detained people were accused of damaging public property and inciting violence.

Earlier, police detained a dozen people who stood still at Istanbul’s Taksim Square in a form of passive defiance against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s authority after activists were ousted from a sit-in at a park over the weekend.

The wave of anti-government protest that has swept through Turkey starting May 31 has shaken the country’s secular democracy.

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Turkey unions strike over crackdown

Members of two union federations in Turkey have gone on a one-day strike over the forced evictions of protesters from Istanbul’s Gezi Park, the focal point of fierce anti-government demonstrations that swept much of the country over the past two weeks.

Labour groups representing doctors, engineers and dentists are also said to have joined the strike on Monday. The striking groups represent about 800,000 workers.

The Turkish Interior Minister Muammer Guler said the strike was “illegal” and warned of police action.

The call for the strike came as police and protesters clashed sporadically in Istanbul overnight following a weekend of scuffles in the city.

Riot police backed by a helicopter, some in plain clothes and carrying batons, fired teargas and chased groups of rock-throwing youths into side streets around the iconic Taksim Square and Gezi Park late on Sunday night, trying to prevent them from regrouping.

There were also disturbances in other parts of the city that had so far largely been spared the violence, including around the Galata bridge, which crosses to the historic Sultanahmet district, and the upmarket Nisantasi neighbourhood.

Erdogan supporters

The police had earlier during the day moved in to clear Gezi Park of protesters occupying the area adjoining Taksim Square, as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan addressed hundreds of thousands of his supporters at an Istanbul parade. 

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Erdogan told a sea of flag-waving supporters that two weeks of unrest had been manipulated by “terrorists” and dismissed suggestions that he was behaving like a dictator, a constant refrain from those who have taken to the streets.

“They say ‘you are too tough’, they say ‘dictator’. What kind of a dictator is this who met the Gezi Park occupiers and honest environmentalists? Is there such a dictator?” Erdogan said to roars of approval from the crowd.

He dismissed the demonstrations as “nothing more than the minority’s attempt to dominate the majority … We could not have allowed this and we will not allow it.”

A small-scale environmental protest against government plans to redevelop Gezi Park had snowballed into a larger movement against the government of Erdogan.

The clashes pose no immediate threat to Erdogan’s leadership, but they have tarnished Turkey’s image as an oasis of stability on the fringes of the volatile Middle East, and presented him with the greatest challenge of his 10-year rule.

Show of strength

The prime minister has long been Turkey’s most popular politician, overseeing a decade of unprecedented prosperity, and his AK Party has won an increasing share of the vote in three successive election victories.

Erdogan, who also addressed supporters of his ruling AK Party in Ankara on Saturday, said the rallies were to kick off campaigning for local elections next year and not related to the unrest, but they were widely seen as a show of strength.

The crowds who packed Istanbul’s Kazlicesme festival ground, many of whom walked for kilometres, turned out to support a leader who they feel has been under siege.

“We are the silent majority, not the riff-raff who are trying to frighten us,” said Ruveyda Alkan, 32, her head covered in a black veil and waving a red Turkish flag.

The two weeks of unrest have left four people dead and about 5,000 injured, according to the Turkish Medical Association.

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Turkey: Police Expel Protesters From Park

Riot police have used tear gas and water cannons to force anti-government protesters out of Istanbul’s Gezi Park.

The police moved in on the evening of June 15 after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave an ultimatum to protesters to end their occupation of the park.

After protesters fled, bulldozers and cleaning crews arrived to clear the area of tents and barricades.

The protesters had remained in the park, even after officials offered assurances that the government has suspended its plan to cut down trees in the park to enable construction there.

Officials say the government will await a court ruling on the legality of the redevelopment plan, as well as hold a referendum on the question, before taking action.

The past two weeks of protests have marked the biggest unrest in Turkey in decades.

Based on reports from Reuters, AFP and AP

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Turkey protesters ponder reply to park delay

Turkish protesters have held talks to discuss their next move after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed to suspend redevelopment of a park in Istanbul in a bid to end two weeks of deadly anti-government unrest.

Al Jazeera’s correspondents in Istanbul said Taksim Solidarity, seen as most representative of the the protesters, would announce its final decision at 1200 GMT.

But Erdogan’s appeal for protesters to evacuate Gezi Park looked set to be ignored as demonstrators rolled out their sleeping bags on Friday evening as talks to end the unrest continued.

Meanwhile, police detained dozens of protesters in Ankara on Saturday as hundreds of protesters flocked to the streets of the Turkish capital to demonstrate against Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

Police used water cannons and smoke grenades to disperse the protest.

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Ergogan agreed on Friday to halt the Istanbul park project until a court rules on its legality, marking the first easing of tensions in the standoff.

If passed by the court, the project would then be put to a referendum.

The protest over the park exposed simmering tensions within the country between secularists and Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted government.

The protests have left three people dead and 5,000 injured, presenting the AKP with its biggest challenge in its decade-long rule, seen by many as increasingly authoritarian.

“Young people, you have remained there long enough and delivered your message…. Why are you staying?” Erdogan said in a speech broadcast live on television. “I hope it will be over by tonight.”

A peaceful sit-in to save Gezi Park’s 600 trees from being razed prompted a brutal police response on May 31, spiralling into nationwide demonstrations against Erdogan and the AKP.

The crackdown has prompted Western nations to criticise the government for its handling of the crisis and blamed police for their brutality.

Police have used tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets against demonstrators who have hurled back fireworks and Molotov cocktails.

‘Last warning’

Erdogan has taken a combative stance against the demonstrators, dismissing them as “looters” and “extremists”.

But after they defied his “last warning” to clear out of the park on Thursday, he held emergency talks with Taksim Solidarity.

In what was hailed as a win by the representatives, the meeting led to Erdogan’s first major concession since the conflict began.

Erdogan said that if the court rules the Gezi Park redevelopment is legal, he wants to hold a popular vote on plans to build a replica of Ottoman-era military barracks on the site.

Taksim Solidarity responded more coolly to the referendum idea but vowed to take the premier’s proposals to Gezi Park, where protesters held discussion forums into the night to come up with a joint response.

Early indications suggested that many of the campers, most of whom are young and middle-class, were determined to stay in the park despite the government’s olive branch, claiming that the protest had morphed into something bigger.

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Turkey may consider referendum on park plan

Just hours after the Turkish government indicated that it was open to holding a referendum on a controversial Istanbul development plan, demonstrators defied an order to end almost two weeks of protests by singing and chanting in the city’s Taksim Square.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister, said on Wednesday he would consider holding a referendum on plans to redevelop Gezi Park that have led to nationwide protests, in his first major concession.

Gezi Park is a leafy corner of Taksim Square where the protesters have set up a makeshift settlement of tents.

The mood in the public square on Wednesday night was subdued and peaceful, in stark contrast to the previous night when protesters fought running battles with riot police.

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Riot police looked on from the fringes as crowds mingled late into Wednesday night, some protesters chanting and dancing, others applauding a concert pianist who took up residence with a grand piano in the middle of the square.

Demonstrators gathered around the live piano concert intermittently chanted: “Everywhere is Taksim, everywhere is resistance!”

It was a stark contrast to the scene 24 hours earlier, when tear gas sent thousands scurrying into side streets before authorities bulldozed barricades and reopened the square to traffic for the first time since the troubles began.

Meanwhile, protesters demonstrating in the capital Ankara were once again subjected to a police crackdown, with riot police firing tear gas overnight to disperse up to 2,000 people who were clustered in Tunali Street, one of the central spots for mass anti-government rallies.

Earlier on Wednesday, thousands of lawyers took to the streets in Istanbul and Ankara in protest at the brief detention of over 70 colleagues the previous day after they objected to the police violently reclaiming Taksim Square.

Park concession

The offer to hold a referendum on the Gezi Park redevelopment is one of the only concessions the authorities have publicly floated after days of firm rhetoric from Erdogan.

The deputy chairman of the ruling AK Party, Huseyin Celik, said on Wednesday the protesters should withdraw from the park.

“The government can’t accept these protests going on forever,” he said in Ankara following a meeting between Erdogan and a group of public figures linked to the Gezi Park protesters.

“Those with bad intentions or who seek to provoke and remain in the park will [now] be facing the police.”

The representatives, a loose coalition of environmental campaigners, did not comment on the referendum proposal after the talks.

Taksim Solidarity, an umbrella group for the demonstrators, said the delegation that met Erdogan was not representative and the meeting little more than symbolic.

“Had Solidarity spoken with anyone in this group to share information, the meeting with the prime minister would have meaning. Now it doesn’t,” Bulent Muftuoglu, a leading Solidarity figure and an official of Turkey’s Greens Party, said.

Celik, the AK Party official, gave few details of how a referendum would be carried out, saying it could either be held across Istanbul or just in the district near Taksim.

Protesters also want the government to punish those responsible for the violent police crackdown.

A police operation in Gezi Park nearly two weeks ago led to a wave of protest against the perceived authoritarianism of Erdogan and his Islamist-rooted AK Party, drawing in a broad alliance of secularists, nationalists, professionals, unionists and students.

Police fired tear gas and water cannon day after day in cities including Ankara last week. Three people, one a policeman, died and about 5,000 people were injured, according to the Turkish Medical Association.

Erdogan has accused foreign forces, international media and market speculators of stirring conflict and trying to undermine the economy of the only largely Muslim NATO state.

Journalists detained

In other unrest-related developments, two foreign correspondents from the Canadian Broadcasting Corp (CBC) were briefly detained by police on Wednesday.

They were detained by Turkish police and later released, the two reporters said in messages on the social media site Twitter.

Separately, Turkey’s broadcasting authority said it was fining four television channels over their coverage of the protests on the grounds of inciting violence, media reports said.

Erdogan argues that the broader mass of people have been manipulated by extremists and terrorists and says his political authority derives from his popular mandate in three successive election victories.

President Abdullah Gul, who has struck a more conciliatory tone than Erdogan, said it was the duty of government to engage with critics, but also appeared to close ranks with the prime minister, saying violent protests were a different matter.

“If people have objections … then to engage in a dialogue with these people, to hear out what they say, is no doubt our duty,” Gul said.

“Those who employ violence are something different and we have to distinguish them … This would not be allowed in New York, this would not be allowed in Berlin.”

The US has expressed concern about events and urged dialogue between government and protesters.

The European Union has also called on Erdogan’s government to investigate cases of excessive force.

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Turkey mulls referendum on Taksim park plan

A spokesman for Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s party has said the government is open to holding a referendum over an Istanbul development plan that has underpinned nearly two weeks of mass protests.

The announcement from AK party spokesman Huseyin Celik came after talks between Erdogan and a group of activists on Wednesday.

It amounts to the first big gesture by his government to end a standoff with protesters in Istanbul’s Taksim Square and beyond.

Earlier in the day, President Abdullah Gul called for dialogue with non-violent demonstrators after riot police cleared the square.

Gul, who has taken a more conciliatory tone than Erdogan during the unrest, said it was the duty of the government to engage with its critics but appeared to close ranks with the prime minister, saying violent protests were a different matter.

The protests, which have turned into riots met with tear gas and water cannon, began as a peaceful campaign against redevelopment plans of Gezi Park in Taksim Square.

“If people have objections … then to engage in a dialogue with these people, to hear out what they say is no doubt our duty,” Gul told reporters.

“Those who employ violence are something different and we have to distinguish them … We must not give violence a chance … This would not be allowed in New York, this would not be allowed in Berlin,” the president said during a visit to the Black Sea coast.

Riot police fought running battles with groups of protesters overnight, clearing Taksim. By dawn, the square was strewn with wreckage from bulldozed barricades but taxis crossed it for the first time since the troubles started.

Several hundred people remained in an encampment of tents in Gezi Park.

Taksim Solidarity, an umbrella group for the demonstrators, said the delegation meeting with Erdogan was not representative and the meeting little more than symbolic.

“Had Solidarity spoken with anyone in this group to share information, the meeting with the prime minister would have meaning. Now it doesn’t,” said Bulent Muftuoglu, a leading figure in Solidarity and an official of Turkey’s Greens Party.

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Turkey: A History of Sexual Violence

“I was blindfolded, stripped naked, beaten…and they tried to put sticks up my anus. I fainted,” stated 37-year-old mother of three, Hamdiye Aslan.

Hamdiye Aslan’s alleged perpetrators were five police officers. According to a report from Amnesty International in 2003, she had been detained in Mardin Prison, south-east Turkey, for almost three months in which she was reportedly blindfolded, anally raped with a truncheon, threatened and mocked by officers.

Horrific and shocking as it may sound, activists state that Hamdiye’s case is one of many.

They say that such methods of abuse are regular practice in Turkish prisons, and have reportedly been used on many Kurdish and Alevi women to enforce fear and to humiliate. Hamdiye was told she was being arrested for sheltering the Kurdish rebel movement, the PKK; a charge she denied.

Reporting on cases of sexual abuse in Turkey is often difficult; the issue is still taboo in Turkish culture, as well as the fact that much of Turkish media don’t report on such cases as they tarnish the country’s modern and secular image. The result of this is that many injustices within Turkey, including systematic rapes carried out in prisons to maintain power over communities, go unheard by the rest of the world.

In the early hours of June 28, 1993, Şükran Esen, then aged 21, was accused of assisting the PKK by a group of gendarmes who had arrived at her house. She too denied the charges. A trial observation report by the Kurdish Human Rights Project (KHRP) states that, in an aggravated felony court in the province of Mardin, a prosecutor indicted 405 members of the Derik District Gendarmerie Command, 65 of whom were senior officers, for raping Şükran Esen.

The victim stated that on the three occasions that she was detained she was: raped vaginally by the gendarmes and their officer; given electric shocks; put inside a vehicle tyre and rolled over; subjected to high pressure jet sprays of cold water; and threatened with death. On one occasion, as a result of the sadistic sexual violence, she was finally taken to hospital whilst haemorrhaging. Esen was blindfolded throughout the ordeal and was never able to recognise her perpetrators. Although nine witnesses testified to the arrest of the victim by the gendarme, the accused not only denied committing the alleged offences, but failed to acknowledge that Şükran Esen had ever been detained. A medical report from the International Berlin Torture and Rehabilitation Centre, where Esen had undergone treatment, certified that her injuries were the result of torture.

Both the women’s cases offer examples as to why Turkey has been denied entry into the EU by the European Commission due to the country’s human rights issues. The Turkish State classifies the activities of many pro-Kurdish organisations as ‘terrorism’ because they’re viewed as damaging the state. As a result of this, there have been many cases of Kurdish women allegedly sexually abused while in custody on accusations of being associated with such organisations.

There have been reports of women and children raped with serrated objects, beaten, and forced into so-called ‘virginity tests’ by government officials.

In April this year, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan hailed the withdrawal of PKK rebels from Turkey as the end of “a dark era” and stated: “Turkey is changing its ill fortune and is entering a new phase.” However as sexual violence against women, men and children by state agents remains both common and unmitigated, this promise of a change comes with a dark cloud of doubt looming over it. It’s poignant to question whether Turkey’s idea of fighting terrorism is being used, as it has previously around the world, to undermine human rights in more concealed ways.

The Turkish State doesn’t appear to openly accept its bloody history; the most recent incident being the Uludere massacre in 2011 where Turkish warplanes bombed teenage Kurds crossing into Turkey from Iraq. As time unravels, reports of rape during the systematic ethnic cleansing of Kurdish and Alevi people in the 1937 Dersim massacre have also come to light, though remain unpublicised.

Amnesty International’s 2003 campaign, ‘End Sexual Violence against Women in Custody’ highlighted the “state’s inability to implement its own new legal code and its failure to act with due diligence when complaints are made.” Furthermore, stating that there is “a general climate of impunity for those suspected of torture in Turkey.”

Recent years have revealed that children too are subject to sexual violence in Turkish prisons. In 2012, Turkish newspaper Dicle News reported on the alleged sexual abuse and torture inflicted on Kurdish children whilst imprisoned in Pozantı Juvenile Prison in southern Turkey. The children, all between the ages of 13-17, weren’t only sexually abused by prison officers, guards and soldiers, but denied medical attention and hung from basketball hoops until close to choking as a means of torture.

“Some of our friends were raped by the ordinary prisoners dozens of times. They sometimes tried to force our trousers down. Our experiences cannot be described,” claimed 15-year-old H.K.

With the use of social networking sites, the Pozantı case was exposed. The children were moved to another prison. Their crimes: throwing stones, or as some would point out, they were Kurdish children throwing stones. The Pozantı case is not an “isolated” case, as Turkey’s ruling right-wing Justice and Development Party (AKP) was quick to trumpet to its people. The same government was also very quick to detain the journalists first to report on the Pozantı children, on accusations of being linked to the KCK; a Kurdish organisation linked to the PKK.

Human rights abuses continue to be reported with a rise in complaints by Kurdish women who’ve found the courage to speak out. However, there remain many obstacles in the way of these women getting justice. Many women don’t have much faith in either the Turkish penal system or the police, and so don’t feel that fighting against the history of sexual violence carried out by those with power in patriarchal Turkey is a war which they can prevail.

http://www.guardian.co.uk

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Erupts: The New Young Turks

IT BEGAN with a grove of sycamores. For months environmentalists had been protesting against a government-backed plan to chop the trees down to make room for a shopping and residential complex in Istanbul’s Taksim Square. They organised a peaceful sit-in with tents, singing and dancing. On May 31st riot police staged a pre-dawn raid, dousing the protesters with jets of water and tear gas and setting fire to their encampment. Images of the brutality–showing some protesters bloodied, others blinded by plastic bullets–spread like wildfire across social media.

Within hours thousands of outraged citizens were streaming towards Taksim. Police with armoured personnel carriers and water cannon retaliated with even more brutish force. Blasts of pepper spray sent people reeling and gasping for air. Hundreds were arrested and scores injured in the clashes that ensued. Copycat demonstrations soon erupted in Ankara and elsewhere. By June 3rd most of Turkey’s 81 provinces had seen protests. A “tree revolution” had begun.

In fact these protests are not just about trees. Nor is Turkey really on the brink of a revolution. The convulsions are rather an outpouring of the long-stifled resentment felt by those–nearly half of the electorate–who did not vote for the moderately Islamist Justice and Development (AK) party in the election of June 2011 that swept Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s combative prime minister, to a third term. The most popular slogan on the streets was “Tayyip Resign”. Millions of housewives joined in, clanging their pans in solidarity and belying government claims that the protests had been pre-planned rather than spontaneous.

Rainbow nation

It took 24 hours for Mr Erdogan to respond–whereupon he called the protesters “louts” who were acting under orders from “foreign powers”. The wave of unrest evidently caught his government off guard. “The limits of its power have now been drawn,” said Kadri Gursel, a columnist for the daily Milliyet. By June 5th at least three people had died and thousands of others had been hurt; students referred to their bruises as “Erdogan’s kiss”. The Istanbul Stock Exchange fell by as much as 12% on June 3rd, before recovering slightly the next day. Barack Obama’s administration expressed “serious concerns”.

Who are the protesters who have created the biggest political crisis in a decade of Mr Erdogan’s rule? Many are critics of Turkey’s huge urban-development projects, favoured by a government that wants to pep up the slowing economy with infrastructure spending. The schemes include a third bridge over the Bosporus that will entail felling thousands of trees (and was to have been named after an Ottoman sultan who slaughtered thousands of Alevis); a huge new airport for Istanbul; and a canal joining the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara. Environmentalists are appalled.

But, contrary to Mr Erdogan’s efforts to portray the protesters as thugs and extremists, they cut across ideological, religious and class lines. Many are strikingly young; but there are plenty of older Turks, many secular-minded, some overtly pious. There are gays, Armenians, anarchists and atheists. There are also members of Turkey’s long-ostracised Alevi minority, who practise a liberal form of Islam and complain of state discrimination in favour of the Sunni majority. Each group added its grievances to the litany of complaints.

What unites them is a belief that Mr Erdogan is increasingly autocratic, and blindly determined to impose his views and social conservatism on the country. The secularists point to a raft of restrictions on the sale of alcohol, liberals to the number of journalists in jail, more than in any other country. Thousands of activists of varying stripes (mainly Kurds), convicted under Turkey’s vaguely worded anti-terror laws, are also behind bars. “This is not about secularists versus Islamists, it’s about pluralism versus authoritarianism,” commented one foreign diplomat.

Mr Erdogan’s peevish reaction to the tumult vindicated his critics. He accepted that the use of tear gas had been overdone, and told police to withdraw from Taksim Square. This let thousands gather peacefully a day later. But as the protests gained momentum across the country he poured oil on the flames. The national spy agency would be investigating the mischief, he vowed. He lashed out at social media, especially Twitter. These, he said, were “the greatest scourge to befall society” (in the city of Izmir, on the Mediterranean coast, 29 people have been arrested on the grounds that their tweets incited violence).

The Taksim project would go ahead, Mr Erdogan insisted. He made only a small concession, saying it might house a museum not a shopping arcade; scenting the mood, many retailers are anyway pulling out of the plan.

As for claims that new restrictions on alcohol constituted an infringement of freedom, he dismissed them as nonsense. The measures were for the public good. Besides, “anyone who drinks is an alcoholic”, he said, “save those who vote for AK.” In reply, someone tweeted that if drinking alcohol makes you an alcoholic, then being in power makes you a dictator. To many, Mr Erdogan sounded like the Turkish generals who used to meddle because they knew what was best for the people.

Divide and rule

That wasn’t all. When the main opposition leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), called on Mr Erdogan to resign, he threatened to unleash “a million of my people” against CHP supporters. He was “suppressing them with the greatest of difficulty”. His departure on June 3rd, on an official visit to north Africa, left some AK party officials sighing with relief. In his absence Bulent Arinc, the deputy prime minister, acknowledged on June 4th that the police had used “excessive force”. “I apologise to the environmentally conscious people who were subjected to violence,” he added, the first hint of regret from the government (but which appeared not to extend to protesters with other motives). Abdullah Gul, the president, had already declared that, in a democracy, every citizen’s view deserved respect.

Mr Erdogan’s response was a perfect example of the polarising manner in which he has governed in recent years. Buoyed by three successive election victories, in 2002, 2007 and 2011–his AK party taking a rising share of the vote–Mr Erdogan has elbowed all rivals aside. He has also managed to neutralise most potential checks on his power, including the army, the judiciary and the media, which he has intimidated into self-censorship.

Hints of his intolerance came during his first term, when he tried to criminalise adultery. Faced with a popular outcry (and rebukes from the European Union), he was forced to back down. But during most of his early years, he inspired hope. Sticking to the IMF prescriptions that he inherited, he rescued the economy from the meltdown it suffered in 2001. In the past ten years GDP per person has tripled, exports have increased nearly tenfold and foreign direct investment has leapt. Turkey is now the world’s 17th biggest economy.

Turkey’s robust banks are the envy of their beleaguered Western peers. Although income inequality is worryingly wide, wealth that was once concentrated in the hands of the Istanbul-based elite has spread to the Anatolian hinterland, leading to the rise of a new class of pious and innovative entrepreneurs who are powering growth. Hundreds of new hospitals, roads and schools have dramatically improved the lives of the poor.

The OECD, a rich-country think-tank, and the IMF, say Turkey needs more labour-market and other reforms, not least to boost the employment rate among women. Secular Turks might argue that what the country needs is more opera houses and public sculpture. But the majority have never had it so good. This rising prosperity helped to give Mr Erdogan’s government broad nationwide approval.

In his first term Mr Erdogan also embarked on sweeping domestic reforms that, in 2005, persuaded the EU to open membership talks with Turkey. He began by neutering the country’s traditionally meddlesome generals. Their influence over institutions such as the judiciary and the National Security Council, through which they barked their orders, has ended. Meanwhile hundreds of alleged coup-plotters caught up in the so-called Ergenekon and Sledgehammer cases–including many generals and a former chief of the general staff–are in jail, awaiting trial.

All this means that Mr Erdogan has been Turkey’s most effective and popular leader since Kemal Ataturk, who founded the secular republic on the ruins of the Ottoman empire. And he is not only popular at home. Unlike most of his predecessors, and supported by the foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, he has embraced Turkey’s Arab neighbours, opening new markets for Turkish contractors and drawing in Gulf Arab investors. Mr Erdogan has also struck an alliance with Iraq’s oil-rich Kurds, a move that has helped pave the way for his bold and ambitious effort to make peace with Turkey’s own Kurds.

The downside

Alas the problems, some of them of Mr Erdogan’s own making, have been mounting. Critics say the judicial reforms that were approved in 2010 have given the government a worryingly big say over the appointment of judges. They point to the Ergenekon case, which has put nearly every serving admiral behind bars. The trial has been dogged with allegations of fabricated evidence. Prosecutors have at times seemed more interested in exacting revenge than justice.

Turkey’s foreign policy is falling apart, victim to Mr Erdogan’s hubris. Even if his salvoes against Israel have pleased the Arab street, they have raised eyebrows in Washington and deprived Turkey of a useful regional partner. His overt support for rebels fighting to topple Syria’s president, Bashar Assad, whom he wrongly predicted would quickly fall, is growing more unpopular. In May twin car-bomb explosions ripped through the town of Reyhanli on the Syrian border, killing 51 people. Turkey said Syria’s secret service was responsible; Syria denies this. But most Turks believe that Mr Erdogan risks dragging their country into war. In the ultimate irony, the Syrian government has warned people not to travel to Turkey, declaring it “unsafe”.

The economy, too, is lacklustre. Growth has fallen to 3%, and unemployment is stubbornly high (see chart). A large current-account deficit makes Turkey vulnerable to a shift in market sentiment that might easily follow the present unrest.

Mr Erdogan seems unfazed by all this. Surrounded by sycophants, he is out of touch. Liberals who once supported him are defecting. Secular Turks are incensed by what they see as the steady dilution of Ataturk’s legacy. The introduction of Koran classes for primary-school pupils and the revival of Islamic clerical training for middle schools are examples of creeping Islamisation, they say. For some secularists the planned new restrictions on booze–it cannot be sold in shops between 10pm and 6am, and producers can no longer advertise–were a tipping point.

What angered them most was Mr Erdogan’s reference to “a pair of drunks”. “Why are their laws sacred and one that is ordered by religion [Islam] deemed objectionable?” he asked in parliament. He was assumed to be referring to Ataturk and his successor as president, Ismet Inonu. “How dare he insult our national hero? Without Ataturk there would have been no Turkey,” said Melis Bostanoglu, a young banker among thousands marching in Baghdad Avenue, a posh secular neighbourhood on Istanbul’s Asian side.

Politics a la Turca

The protests show that Turkey’s political fault lines have shifted. Scenes of tattooed youths helping women in headscarves stricken by tear gas have bust tired stereotypes about secularism versus Islam. Many protesters were born in the 1990s–reflecting the bulge of teenagers and twenty-somethings in the population. As many women as men were among them.

These people have no memory of the bloody street battles pitting left against right before the army took power in 1980, nor of the inept and corrupt politicians who drove the economy into the ground in 2001. Their views are shaped by Twitter and Facebook; they have higher expectations than their parents. “Being respected is one of them,” said Fatmagul Sensoy, a student. Mr Erdogan “tells us how many children to have [three], what not to eat [white bread] and what not to drink,” Ms Sensoy complained.

Her generation cares as much about animals and the environment as about smartphones. They set up hotlines for stray cats and dogs injured in the clashes and cleared litter after each protest. They fended off vandals who sought to hijack the events. And they marched alongside “anti-capitalist Muslims”, an umbrella group for devout young Turks disgusted by the government’s pursuit of commercial gain at the expense of the environment, and, worse, of its Islamic credentials.

To all of them, Mr Erdogan’s grip seems as unshakable as it is stifling. This is because AK has no credible opponents. The struggle between old-style Kemalists and modernisers led by Mr Kilicdaroglu (an Alevi) continues to hobble the CHP. This may explain the perverse dismay the opposition felt when the government embarked on a peace process with the Kurds, who pose the only serious challenge.

The slavish media have nurtured Mr Erdogan’s sense of infallibility. Eager to curry favour, media bosses continue to fire journalists who criticise the government. The craven self-censorship plumbed new depths when the protests broke out. The mainstream news channels chose to ignore them, broadcasting programmes about gourmet cooking and breast enlargement instead. Infuriated protesters marched on the offices of Haberturk, a news channel. “Sold-out media,” they shouted, as ashen-faced reporters peered out of the windows.

Mr Erdogan intends to stick around. He has long wanted to succeed Mr Gul as Turkey’s first popularly elected president next year (hitherto incumbents have been chosen by parliament). Not only that: he wants to enhance the powers of the post “a la Turca”, as he puts it, enabling the president to dissolve parliament and appoint the cabinet. The protests have put a damper on what was already a fading prospect.

They may also hobble the effort to create a new democratic constitution, in place of the one written by the generals after the 1980 coup. Crucially, the new document might guarantee the rights of the Kurds. A parliamentary commission has made little progress, because the opposition parties keep throwing up new hurdles–objecting to the removal of references to Turkish ethnicity, for example, and to education in Kurdish. Even before the protests there were signs that Mr Erdogan would defer the constitutional question until after local elections next March. He will now be even warier of alienating his nationalist base by mollifying the Kurds.

Such stalling might jeopardise peace. Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has been co-operative, renouncing demands for independence, declaring that the days of armed conflict are over and calling on the PKK to withdraw to Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq. Organised Kurdish groups have been glaringly absent from the protests, a sign that they do not want to put the peace talks at risk. But their patience may wear thin. This week there were reports of clashes with the army on the Iraqi border, the first since the PKK announced a ceasefire in March.

Erdogan’s move

For the first time since he came to power, Mr Erdogan looks vulnerable. This may encourage Mr Gul to make a bid for his job: under AK party rules Mr Erdogan cannot run for the premiership again. It is no secret that he would prefer a more malleable ally for the post, to retain his control over AK and the country after he leaves it.

The protests continued as The Economist went to press. But, when they end, there will be many uncertainties. What if Mr Gul decides to stand for a second term as president? Both the CHP and the far-right Nationalist Action Party would support his candidacy, as would Turkey’s most influential cleric, Fethullah Gulen. If he did, and stayed on, Mr Erdogan would be left with neither of the top jobs.

Mr Erdogan may be a natural autocrat but he is also pragmatic. Time and again he has pulled back from the brink. The Taksim rebellion is his biggest challenge so far. If he can swallow his pride and make real amends, Mr Erdogan could yet repair much of the damage. But polarising the country is in his nature. If that continues, a decade of economic and political stability under the AK party may yet come to a pitiful or even tragic end.

http://www.economist.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Protests Unnerve Arab Islamists, Analysts Say

Cairo (AFP) — The pro-secular protests rocking Turkish cities have sent ripples across the Arab world, unnerving Islamist leaders who have long touted Turkey as a successful model of political Islam, analysts say.

Thousands of Turks have joined in mass anti-government demonstrations, defying Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s call to end the worst civil unrest of his decade-long rule.

Turkey’s unrest began when police cracked down heavily on a small campaign to save an Istanbul park from demolition, spiralling into nationwide protests against Erdogan and his Islamist-based Justice and Development Party (AKP), seen as increasingly authoritarian. Across the Mediterranean, Arab Spring countries are keeping a close eye on events.

Islamist-led Egypt and Tunisia “must be worried about the problems faced by Erdogan’s Turkey, a supposedly successful model” of political Islam, said Antoine Basbous director of the Paris-based Observatory of Arab countries. Tunisia and Egypt – where unprecedented revolts led to the ouster of longtime dictators in 2011 and propelled Islamists to the forefront of politics- have repeatedly pointed to Turkey as a good example of a moderate Islamist democracy.

The Islamist party Ennahda which won post-revolution polls in Tunisia has openly expressed its admiration for the “Turkish model,” while Egyptian President Mohammad Mursi who addressed the AKP’s congress in September 2012 lauded Erdogan’s party as a “source of inspiration”.

But both Arab states have been suffering increasing polarisation between Islamists and secularists, with Islamists in power accused of failing to live up to their promise of guaranteeing rights and freedoms.

In Egypt, many are drawing parallels between the anti-AKP protests and the mass rallies scheduled for June 30 against President Mursi on the first anniversary of his assumption of power.

But members of Mursi’s Freedom and Justice Party say such parallels are only aimed at pulling the rug from under the Islamist regimes.

“What is going on in Turkey has nothing to do with daily or economic needs. It is intended to promote the idea that Islamic regimes, which have made economic achievements and proved to the world that they can stand in the face of all external challenges, have failed,” Murad Ali, the FJP’s media adviser, said in a newspaper interview.

But Basbous argues that the Turkey protests are serving to remind liberals and secularists in the Arab world “that they were the motor of change” during the 2011 uprisings.

However, that will not necessarily translate into change on the ground because the secular opposition in the Arab Spring countries remains weak and poorly organised, he said.

In Tunisia, political analyst Sami Brahem said: “There are attempts to export what’s happening in Turkey to Tunisia. It may not inspire a major protest movement, but [the situation in Turkey] can be a moral support to secularists.”

Some see the protests in Turkey as part of a region-wide discontent with political Islam, despite the stark differences in context – Erdogan was elected three times, with a steady increase of votes each time.

“At the end of the day, what matters is not the soundness of the analogy, but public perceptions of it and its ability to capture the imagination, which it seems to be doing right now,” said Hesham Salam, Washington-based political analyst at Georgetown University.

Assyrian International News Agency

In Turkey, Rival Soccer Fans Unite, Join Antigovernment Protests

ISTANBUL — There are not many bricks left on the Gazhane Bostani street sidewalk, but a small cadre of soccer fans is intent on making sure the few that remain do not go to waste. 
 
They finesse them out of the ground and toss them onto one of the many homemade barricades meant to prevent police – and their water cannons – from approaching Taksim Square, just a few blocks away.
 
Clashes with authorities are not a new phenomenon for the fans of Turkey’s three most popular soccer teams. But the image of them teaming up against a common enemy is jarring to anyone here who has followed the cutthroat world of Turkish football fandom.

On the evening of June 8, they led massive demonstrations up to Taksim Square. They joined forces 10 days ago to help protesters in a battle with police that began in opposition to a development project in the square but which has since ballooned into a massive movement against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
 
The scene on Gazhane Bostani has become a hallmark of the protest movement. Here, hard-core fans — or “ultras” — of Besiktas and Fenerbahce work together toward a common goal.

 ”We believe Turkey is a dictatorial state and that our freedoms are limited,” Burak, 24, a Besiktas fan, said as he helped to construct the barricade. “And that’s why for the future, to have a freer country, we’ve given up the difference in [team] colors. We’re trying to do something here all together.”
 
Truce Following Death

The vicious rivalry between the three teams dates back to the early 1980s, when Besiktas fans from the eponymous working-class neighborhood created the Carsi fan club. Pitched battles on issues like which fan base could lay claim to which section of a stadium carried over onto the street.

Protesters take cover from water cannons during clashes with police in Ankara on June 8.

A 2011 “New Yorker” magazine article about the rivals said the enmity reached a fevered pitch when, in 1991, a Besiktas supporter was kicked to death by a mob of Galatasaray fans.
 
Afterwards, the teams — Besiktas, near Taksim Square; Fenerbahce, on Istanbul’s Asian side; and Galatasaray, Turkey’s most successful team, located in the Sisli District on the European side — agreed to a truce, but the animosity remained and fights continued.
 

ALSO READ: The ‘Marxist Muslims’ Of Taksim Square

Cetin Cem Yilmaz, the sports editor at the “Hurriyet Daily News,” said the soccer climate in Turkey before the protests had reached a low point and showed no signs of improving.
 
During a game in mid-May, Dildier Drogba, the star striker for Galatasaray and an Ivory Coast native, was taunted with racist chants by Fenerbahce supporters.
 
Afterwards, a Fenerbahce fan, Burak Yildrim, was stabbed to death by two people wearing Galatasaray attire.
 
“Last month was really ugly,” Yilmaz says, “and it was getting more and more ugly.”
 
But Yilmaz says the recent union, though sudden and unexpected, seems to have happened organically.

Fighting On The Same Side
 
When news spread that police were breaking up protests on Taksim Square on May 31, fan clubs from each team announced on social networks that they would gather to support the protesters. When clashes moved from the square to Besiktas, the three fan clubs suddenly found themselves fighting on the same side — all trying to protect the Besiktas heartland.
 

A demonstrator clashes with riot police in Istanbul’s Gazi neighborhood on the evening of June 8.

The three clubs made an immediate unity pact.
 
“Besiktas, Galatasaray and Fenerbahce in Taksim together,” Tweeted Galatasaray. “We are one heart today.”
 
On Taksim Square, where the atmosphere is louder and more festive than on the fortressed side streets of Istanbul, Amik Kemal Bora Gomulleroglu, a self-described fanatic who dons the red-and-yellow jersey of Galatasaray, says he is proud of the new unity.
 
“I have never seen this kind of thing — all the teams being united because of one main idea,” he says. “We are losing our rights and there is no chance to even say this loudly.”
 
Of the football clubs, only Besiktas has a long history of political activism. It usually has a distinct leftist bent. In the logo of its Carsi support group, the letter “A” is represented by the common symbol used for anarchy.

‘We’re All Brothers’

Several fans from different clubs who spoke to RFE/RL said they fear the secular legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, who is revered by many here, was under attack by Erdogan, who leads the Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP).  
 
A group of fans supporting Fenerbahce expressed nationalist sentiment, criticizing Erdogan for attempting to negotiate a peace deal with the separatist Kurdistan Workers Party.

“Turkey is for Turks,” one fan said.
 

Regardless of the political motives, fans of each team say they are enjoying the newfound camaraderie.
 
Yilmaz says the interclub animosity could heat up again when soccer play resumes after a break in August, but the nature of the rivalry may have changed for good.
 
Back at the improvised fortress, Ugur, an 18-year-old textile worker wearing the black-and-white stripes of Besiktas and a Guy Fawkes mask on top of his head, says the new connections are strong.
 
“We’re all brothers,” he says. “So even though there’s an ongoing fight, it’s a friendship forever.”
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Turkey Unrest ‘Payback’ for Fueling Syria Insurgency?

TEL AVIV — Are instigators of the uprising in Turkey being coordinated by foreign powers, as the country has claimed?

Are the violent anti-Turkish government protests being used in any way as “payback” for the country’s central role in fueling, arming and funding the insurgency against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria? Ads by Google

The protests began Friday purportedly in response to a government plan to convert an inner city Istanbul park into an Ottoman-style shopping center. The unrest has quickly fomented into the largest and most violent anti-government protests that Turkey has seen in years.

Calling the protesters an “extremist fringe,” Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an Islamist, has blamed the secular opposition Republican People’s Party for provoking the unrest.

Speaking during a visit to Morocco Monday, Erdogan announced Turkish intelligence is looking into possible links between the protests and what he called “foreign powers.”

Yesterday, he expanded his theory on who is behind the protests to opponents using social media, including Twitter.

“We think that the main opposition party, which is making resistance calls on every street, is provoking these protests,” Erdogan said on Turkish television.

“There is now a menace which is called Twitter,” Erdogan said. “The best examples of lies can be found there. To me, social media is the worst menace to society.”

Although he did not name the “foreign powers” supposedly being investigated by Turkish intelligence, the most obvious state actors that would stand to gain from the unrest are Syria, Iran and Russia.

The Republican People’s Party, the main opposition party in Turkey, has longstanding ideological ties to Russia, although there is no known evidence the two are working together.

Turkey is the primary country aiding the insurgency against Assad in Syria. Turkey has been used as a forward base for the thousands of jihadists streaming into neighboring Syria to attack regime targets. Turkey has reportedly been arming the Syria opposition and recruiting fighters to join the ranks of the Free Syrian Army.

Additionally, Erdogan has been leading a campaign calling for an international, NATO-led no-fly-zone to be imposed in Syria.

Iran and Russia, on the other hand, have been the main state actors aiding Assad. Russia has been supplying advanced weaponry to the Assad regime.

The Republican People’s Party is a Kemalist, social-liberal and social democratic political party in Turkey.

The party was founded on Kemalist principals, the political ideology of Mustafa Kemal, who founded Turkey in 1923.

Kemal worked closely with the Soviet Union, signing a “Friendship and Brotherhood” treaty that allowed the Soviets to arm his military adventures.

The current platform of the Republican People’s Party leading the protests is the same “six arrows,” or six principles, of Kemal’s ideology: republicanism, nationalism, statism, populism, secularism and revolutionism.

While Kemal did not see Soviet-style communism as best for Turkey in the 1920s, his ideology was steeped in communist influence.

The principle of Kemalist Statism, for example, put the state as the regulator of economic activities. Like Soviet communism, Kemal’s statism in practice saw the state emerge as the major owner of industries.

Writing in the International Review of Turkish Studies, author Vahram Ter-Matevosyan addressed the Soviet influence on Kemalism.

“Observation of the Soviet historiography reveals some important aspects of the Soviet treatment of political and social transformations that took place in Turkey in the 1920-30s,” wrote Matevosyan.

“Soviet diplomats, ideologues and intellectuals dealing with Turkey at the time treated the deeds of Mustafa Kemal with visible admiration and were among the first to identify and emphasize the inherent ideological components existent in his massive undertakings.”

The modern Republican People’s Party, which sees itself as the ideological heir to Kemal, is a member of the Socialists International, the world’s largest socialist umbrella group. It is also an associate member of the Party of European Socialists.

Since the protests in Turkey began, Iran has signaled a newfound willingness to bring Turkey to a settlement with Damascus.

On Friday, Iran’s Ambassador to Turkey, Alireza Bigdeli, said the restoration of ties and interaction between Ankara and Damascus can help resolve the conflict in Syria.

“If need be, Iran can mediate in that regard,” Bigdeli said.

On Sunday, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman, Abbas Araqchi, described the protests rocking Turkey as an “internal affair” he hoped “would be resolved in a peaceful manner with the prudence of Turkish leaders.”

With additional research by Joshua Klein.

By Aaron Klein
http://www.wnd.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Crisis and Erdogan: Refusing to Listen and Media Oppression

Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the current Prime Minister of Turkey but he currently isn’t acting with any major intellect. On the contrary, when Turkey faces its most potent internal social and political crisis, Erdogan responds by travelling abroad on a planned political trip. However, this act merely highlights that he is aloof from the reality on the ground and it shows his utter discontent towards many of the Turkish electorate which have become disillusioned.

It is clear that Turkish nationals who support open democracy, modernization, preserving the secular nature of society and other major positives are the people which are demonstrating in various parts of Turkey. Instead of trying to bridge the enormous gaps in Turkey and catering for people from many different walks of life, it seems that Erdogan intends to crush democracy by stealth. This applies to pandering to Turkish nationals who support his agenda, while alienating all and sundry who oppose his Islamist and dictatorial way of ruling modern day Turkey.

Inside Turkey it is clear that journalists and others face severe oppression based on flimsy charges. Therefore, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) stated that “Authorities have imprisoned journalists on a mass scale on terrorism or anti-state charges, launched thousands of other criminal prosecutions on charges such as denigrating Turkishness or influencing court proceedings, and used pressure tactics to sow self-censorship.”

The CPJ further comments that “The government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has waged one of the world’s biggest crackdowns on press freedom in recent history. Authorities have imprisoned journalists on a mass scale on terrorism or anti-state charges, launched thousands of other criminal prosecutions on charges such as denigrating Turkishness or influencing court proceedings, and used pressure tactics to sow self-censorship. Erdogan has publicly deprecated journalists, urged media outlets to discipline or fire critical staff members, and filed numerous high-profile defamation lawsuits. His government pursued a tax evasion case against the nation’s largest media company that was widely seen as politically motivated and that led to the weakening of the company.”

Indeed, during the ongoing social and political crisis in Turkey, it is clear that many major media agencies in this nation continue to give scant coverage considering the severity of the crisis. Yet, in light of Erdogan’s installed fear within the media sector then it raises the possibility that many media agencies also fear terrible repercussions. If this is the case, then clearly Erdogan is “a dictaror who is ruling under the disguise of democracy.”

Erdogan on his return to Turkey stated “We have never been for building tension and polarisation, but we cannot applaud brutality…They say I am the prime minister of only 50%. It’s not true. We have served the whole of the 76 million from the east to the west….Among the protesters there are extremists, some of them implicated in terrorism…”

He then further highlights his power obsession by stating that “My innocent citizens must extricate themselves from the demonstrations.” However, why does he use “my?” Is it because he believes that he controls and owns people — or does this sum up his worldview whereby questioning Erdogan means going against the government of Turkey?

If Erdogan really wants to show the people of Turkey that he serves “the whole of the 76 million from the east to the west.” Then he needs to acknowledge that many sections of society fear his dictatorial approach to politics. Yes, it is clearly factual that segments within Turkish society support Erdogan. Yet, it is equally true that many segments within society oppose his monopolistic approach to serious issues. More worrying, the political, social and religious gaps are also increasing under his leadership because opposition forces feel penned in and under threat.

In another article by Modern Tokyo Times it was stated that “In a nutshell, irrespective of the positives and negatives of his political leadership in Turkey; it is clear that he is “a dictatorial leader” who happens to be the leader of “a democratic nation.” Thankfully, the institutions of Turkey are not so weak despite certain areas being dismantled in relationship to secularism and other powerful areas. Despite this, you certainly feel that he wants to re-write and re-model modern Turkey within the dynamics of political Islam by stealth. Not surprisingly, it is the ordinary citizens of Turkey which are fed-up by his real intentions therefore the mass demonstrations currently hitting this nation have erupted because of his dictatorial approach to politics within a democratic nation.”

Erdogan needs to reduce his rhetoric and to stop intervening in everyday life in relationship to the natural dynamics of Turkish society. Media oppression and ignoring people who feel marginalized will only create more problems for Turkey in the long run. Turkey needs to move forward based on modernity, social diversity, media freedom, religious pluralism and the right for people to demonstrate without the fear of being beaten and killed. At the same time, the rich fabric of Turkish society needs to be protected from the heavy handed policies being implemented by political elites which have a clear Islamist agenda in Turkey.

CCN reports that “Demonstrators have demanded Erdogan’s resignation, accusing his government of creeping authoritarianism. The demonstrations have united disparate groups dissatisfied with Erdogan and angry over what protesters and international critics have described as a heavy-handed response by security forces.”

“The result has been the biggest challenge to Erdogan and his governing Justice and Development Party during their decade in power.”

More powerfully, in the Hurriyet Daily News it was stated that “It is perfectly normal that Turkey has ended up with zero friends a few years after it ventured to have zero problems with its neighbors. A government at war with half of its own people was unable to achieve peace on its borders with foreign countries. The parallelism on the etiology of failure is just too visible: Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ideologues have failed to make peace with the “drunken” Turks because of their (dogmatic) Islamism, and they have failed to win their hearts because of their neo-Ottoman arrogance. By a simple twist of fate, they have failed to make peace with Turkey’s neighbors because of their (sectarian) Islamism, and they have failed to win their hearts because of their neo-Ottoman arrogance.”

It appears that some politicians in Turkey seek a genuine compromise but it remains to be seen if this logic will enter the mindset of Erdogan. Clearly nobody knows the real impact of the current social and political crisis within the body politic of Turkey. If common sense prevails then secularism and freedom will re-emerge in order to steer this nation during a very delicate period. However, can secularism and democracy be steered under Erdogan given his real intentions?

Modern Tokyo Times

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey protests continue as tourism woes grow

Thousands of angry Turks have taken to the streets to join mass anti-government protests which have stretched to over one week, defying Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s call to end the worst civil unrest of his decade-long rule.

Protesters began arriving in Istanbul’s Taksim Square From early Saturday morning with food and blankets to settle in for a weekend of demonstrations, adding to the growing tent city in nearby Gezi Park.

The lingering rallies, heaviest in Turkey’s main tourist hubs such as Istanbul’s main Taksim Square, are starting to negatively impact business for many.

Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Istanbul, said that “the whole area houses hotels, restaurants and shopping malls, and there are concerns that tourism might decline if the unrest continues.

“Hotels in Istanbul are starting to feel the brunt of the crisis.”

Fresh demonstrations were also planned in the capital Ankara – where Erdogan is expected to be on Sunday – as the crisis entered its ninth day.

“A week ago, I could never imagine myself sleeping out on the streets of Istanbul,” said 22-year-old Aleyna, wrapped up under a blanket with a stray kitten, pointing to her dirty clothes. “Now I don’t know how I can ever go back.”

Erdogan, on Saturday, was meeting in Istanbul with top officials of his Justice and Development Party (AKP) to discuss the crisis, and a deputy prime minister was due to make a speech later on Saturday.

He renewed a call for an immediate end to the protests a day earlier, saying his government was open to “democratic demands”, insisting that the protests were “bordering on vandalism.”

‘Democratic demands’

The political turmoil erupted after police cracked down heavily on a small campaign to save Gezi Park from demolition, spiralling into nationwide protests against Erdogan and the AKP, seen as increasingly authoritarian.

Police have used tear gas and water cannon to disperse demonstrators in clashes that have injured thousands of people and left three dead, tarnishing Turkey’s image as a model of Islamic democracy.

Faced with international criticism, Erdogan on Friday accused Western allies of double standards after EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fule urged a “swift and transparent” probe into police abuses in Turkey, a longtime EU hopeful.

Erdogan issued a sharp retort, saying those involved in a similar protest would “face a harsher response” in any European country.

The premier, who has dismissed the demonstrators as “looters” manipulated by extremists, added in a more conciliatory tone: “I’m open-hearted to anyone with democratic demands.”

But demonstrators dug in their heels overnight, with thousands massing peacefully in a festive Taksim Square, while in other Turkish cities they took to the streets, banging pots and pans as they marched in protest.

Taksim has been free of a police presence since officers relinquished the square to protesters last Saturday after the government acknowledged it was the police’s heavy-handed response that lit the flame of the unrest.

In a quiet night nationwide, one only Istanbul suburb saw fresh clashes, with police using tear gas and water cannon on protesters who reportedly threw fireworks and homemade bombs at them.

534

AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

How Europe Can Save Turkey

Steven A. Cook is the Hasib J. Sabbagh senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of “The Struggle for Egypt: From Nasser to Tahrir Square” and blogs at From the Potomac to the Euphrates.

In the past five years, Turkey has veered from what was once a promising path of liberal democracy — and the European Union can pull it back.

The recent massive street protests in Istanbul started as a backlash against the government’s plan to develop a beloved park into a shopping mall, but they also reflect popular frustration at the country’s authoritarian turn, made clear in the rise of crony capitalism, intimidation by government forces and the centralization of power in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. It was just a decade ago that then-Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul told an audience at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy audience that the main reason his government was pursuing wide-ranging democratic reforms was the possibility of fully joining the European Union. But as that prospect has faded, so has the drive toward democracy in Turkey.

Even before the AKP came to power in late 2002, the party’s leaders determined that E.U. membership was the best means to resolve Turkey’s perennial culture war between Islamists and secularists. With a legislative majority, the AKP quickly abolished the death penalty, wrote a new penal code, changed anti-terrorism laws to make it more difficult to prosecute citizens on speech alone (though critics claim the changes do not go far enough) and significantly expanded political rights. The country also saw tentative steps toward granting Turkey’s Kurds, who account for 18 percent of the nation’s 80 million citizens, additional cultural rights, including the right to use the Kurdish language in broadcasting and education. The parliament also made it more difficult for the government to ban political parties and politicians — previously a common way for Turkey’s political elites to undermine their opponents.

The AKP also brought the politically powerful armed forces under civilian control. In the 1990s, the sway of the military was such that Turkish politicians touted their ability to get along with the senior command as part of their electoral campaigns. But in a series of swift changes beginning in 2003, mixed civilian-military security courts were abolished, officers were removed from boards that set education and broadcasting policies, and parts of the defense budget were brought under civilian oversight. In the most extraordinary reform, the parliament altered the composition and functions of Turkey’s National Security Council — the body through which the top brass had routinely influenced political decisions. Instead, the council was downgraded to an advisory board with a civilian leader and placed under the budgetary control of the prime ministry.

Taken together, these reforms — which Brussels had set as preconditions for Turkey to begin the process of joining the European Union — represented a significant boost for Turkish democracy.

The changes were wildly popular throughout Turkish society — among liberals who considered themselves Europeans, business leaders, Kurds, average Turks and Islamists. The military, which had long claimed to be a vanguard of modernization, simply could not afford to undermine the AKP’s European project because of the popular support it enjoyed. In October 2004, the European Commission concluded that Ankara had met all the requirements — the “Copenhagen criteria” — to begin membership negotiations and recommended that the Council of Europe formally extend Turkey an invitation.

After such an auspicious beginning, however, relations between Turkey and Europe soured. Bureaucrats on both sides contended that the problems were related to human rights violations, the occupation of northern Cyprus and the expenses Europe would need to pour into Turkey should it become a member of the union. But Turks sensed that Europe was having second thoughts about the prospect of admitting a country that is 99.8 percent Muslim. Erdogan and Gul spoke bravely about carrying on with reforms through what they called the “Ankara criteria,” but as the prospect of European membership seemed to dissipate, the pace of change in Turkey slowed, and in important areas such as personal freedoms, reforms actually reversed themselves.

The pragmatism and emphasis on democracy that marked Erdogan’s early years as prime minister gave way to a policy aimed at institutionalizing the power of the AKP. Constitutional changes allowed the Turkish leader to pack the courts and the bureaucracy with his supporters. The Turkish police — never a model of professionalism — seemed to be in the service of political forces rather than the people. The power of the state was used to punish or intimidate big business through massive tax fines. Journalists self-censored for fear of ending up like colleagues who were fired or arrested when they found themselves on the wrong side of the AKP. Improved macroeconomic performance came with crony capitalism, as economic policies largely benefited the AKP’s support base. And Erdogan is still seeking to write a new constitution with enhanced powers for the office of the presidency, which he hopes to pursue after his term as prime minister ends.

After the immediate controversy over Gezi Park is defused — through, perhaps, an act of contrition by Erdogan — the E.U. must return to Turkey with renewed vigor. It is decidedly not in Europe’s interest for a neighboring country of 80 million and an important economic partner to drift inexorably from the values that many Europeans and Turks hold dear.

It’s easy to argue that the E.U., with its sclerotic economies, has nothing to offer Turkey or that Turks, disgusted at Europe’s prejudice against Muslims, are no longer interested in joining a club that doesn’t want them anyway.

Still, there remains a reservoir of support among Turks for the European project. While only 33 to 40 percent of Turks support full E.U. membership — and only 17 percentbelieve it will actually happen — developments in Brussels can sway Turkish public opinion. At the height of the AKP’s E.U. reform program, support for the E.U. ranged around 70 percent, and membership remains an important component of self-identity for many Turks.

The legacy of Ataturk’s goal of “raising Turkey to the level of civilization” plays a role, but more important, many Turks do not see a contradiction between being Muslim and being European. One of the legacies of the AKP during Erdogan’s first term as prime minister (2003-2007) was that it proved Turkey could be more Muslim, more European and more nationalist simultaneously. So it is likely that popular support for E.U. membership would surge in Turkey once again — if Brussels extended a welcoming hand. Reinvigorating the relationship would also be good for the E.U., giving it a new sense of purpose and mission during a time when many question its future.

The European Council should take up the recommendation of the European Parliament to reinvigorate relations with Ankara. A gesture from Europe that gives momentum to Turkey’s accession could have a dynamic effect on Turks and their politics. Although Erdogan continues to enjoy significant support among Turks, there is no doubt that the Gezi Park crisis has weakened him. A renewed negotiation process that is both credible and popular will oblige him to pursue a more pragmatic path at home.

Positive signals from Brussels would also offer an important, face-saving way for Erdogan to return to one of the AKP’s early success stories and allow him to further his greatest ambition — to be a transformative figure, albeit not in the way he has sought in recent years. The combination of the popular appeal of Europe and Erdogan’s diminished power would compel him to pick up where he left off in his first term and again take up the mantle of reform and democratic change. It might just result in a new civil and democratic constitution, and bring millions into Turkey’s streets to celebrate Erdogan rather than demand his political demise.

By Steven A. Cook
Washington Post

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey PM says he welcomes democratic demands

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said his government opposes violence and is open to “democratic demands” raised by demonstrators whose mass protests have rocked the country.

“What we are against is terrorism, violence, vandalism and actions that threaten others for the sake of freedoms,” Erdogan said in a televised conference in Istanbul on Friday. “I’m open-hearted to anyone with democratic demands.”

Appealing to activists campaigning to save Istanbul’s Gezi Park, a campaign that sparked the nationwide unrest, he urged those with environmental concerns to join him.

Turkish PM remains defiant

“I know what environmentalism means,” the former Istanbul mayor said. ”Being an environmentalist is not vandalism. Being an environmentalist is not killing people.”

Doctors say thousands of people have been injured as police have fired tear-gas and water cannon at stone-throwing protesters across the country.

Early on Friday morning, Erdogan was greeted by thousands of supporters waving Turkish flags and chanting “We will die for you, Erdogan” and “Let’s go crush them all”, as they staged their first show of strength after keeping largely silent during seven days of demonstrations.

“I call for an immediate end to the demonstrations, which have turned into unlawfulness and vandalism,” Erdogan said in a speech at the Istanbul airport where he had just returned from a North Africa trip.

EU criticism

European Union Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fule told Erdogan at the same Istanbul conference that excessive police force against demonstrators “has no place” in a democracy.

Many of Turkey’s Western allies have condemned his government’s handling of the demonstrations, but the defiant premier hit back at his critics.

“Similar protests have taken place in Britain, France, Germany and bigger ones in Greece. All of them are members of the European Union,” he said, likening Turkey’s demonstrations to the Occupy Wall Street movement that sprang up in the US in 2011.

The EU, he said, also had a record of human rights problems, noting discrimination against some ethnic groups, including Roma, also known as Gypsies.

The trouble in Turkey broke out a week ago when police violently dispersed demonstrators opposed to the redevelopment of Gezi Park.

It then spread across the country, with riot police firing tear gas and water cannon at thousands of protesters calling for Erdogan’s resignation.

The protests are the fiercest challenge yet to Erdogan’s decade-long rule.

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Turkey PM calls for end to protests

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called for an immediate end to protests against his rule.

The prime minister was greeted early Friday morning by thousands of supporters waving Turkish flags and chanting “We will die for you, Erdogan” and “Let’s go crush them all”, as they staged their first show of strength after keeping largely silent during seven days of violent anti-government demonstrations across the country.

“I call for an immediate end to the demonstrations, which have turned into unlawfulness and vandalism,” Erdogan said in a speech at the Istanbul airport where he had just returned from a North Africa trip.

Flanked by his wife and prominent government ministers, the prime minister praised his supporters for their restraint in recent days, but stressed that he was “the servant” of every citizen in the country.

“You have remained calm, mature and showed common sense,” he said. “We’re all going to go home from here … You’re not the type of people to bang pots and pans on the streets.”

‘Tayyip resign’

Istanbul Municipality, ruled by Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), extended the metro hours until 4am (local time) to allow his supporters to commute to and from the airport more easily.

We are the servants of 76 million people not the 50 percent … We ask everyone to respect the election results as we do

Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
Turkish Prime Minister

Earlier, tens of thousands of angry anti-government protesters again packed cities across the country chanting “Tayyip resign”, others singing and dancing. In Ankara’s Kugulu Park, thousands chanted anti-government slogans, sang the national anthem and swigged on beer.

The nationwide unrest, fuelled by anger against what protesters see as Erdogan’s growing authoritarianism, claimed a third life with the death of a policeman, media said.

Erdogan has so far responded with defiance to the biggest challenge of his decade-long rule, and further enraged protesters on Thursday by vowing to press ahead with the redevelopment of Istanbul’s Gezi Park, whose conservation fight lit the flame of the protests.

Speaking in Tunis ahead of his return, Erdogan reiterated his claims that extremists and foreign agitators were to blame for the violence.

“Among the protesters, there are extremists, some of them implicated in terrorism,” including some who were in Taksim Square where the trouble broke out last week, he told reporters.

‘Fate of this resistance’

Police backed by armoured vehicles and helicopters have clashed with groups of protesters night after night, leaving three dead and some 4,000 injured, while thousands of Erdogan’s opponents have massed peacefully in Taksim, surrounded by barricades of torn-up paving stones and street signs.

Spotlight

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“It’s all up to Erdogan and what he says right now. He will decide the fate of this resistance, whether it will calm [down] or escalate,” said Mehmet Polat, 42, a ship captain who has not worked all week, coming instead to protest at Taksim.

“These people have been here for days, he has to understand it is for a reason,” he said.

The protesters are of a variety of political stripes, including far leftists, nationalists, environmentalists and secular Turks, and their numbers at Taksim have swollen at points to more than an estimated 100,000.

But despite the unrest, Erdogan remains by far Turkey’s most popular politician, his assertive style and common touch resonating with the conservative Islamic heartland.

His AK Party has won an increasing share of the vote in three successive elections and holds around two thirds of the seats in parliament. A man who rarely bows to any opposition, he clearly has no intention of stepping down and there are no obvious rivals inside or outside his party.

Still, he faces a challenge in calming the protests without appearing to lose face.

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Turkey Has Not Been Constitutional State for a Long Time

Turkey has not been a constitutional state for a long time and it is a shame that both Europe and the U.S. turn a blind eye and a deaf ear to that, Alex Alexiev, Chairman of the Center for Balkan and Black Sea Studies in Sofia, said in an interview with FOCUS News Agency.

According to him, about 100 journalists, three times more senior military officers and thousands of students are behind bars without a sentence on framed-up charges of terrorism.

“Neither is there freedom of speech in the media. They are either in the government’s hands, or they are so afraid of Erdogan that they impose censorship on themselves. At the height of the bloody suppression of the protests last Friday CNN Turk was broadcasting a culinary show. That’s why the social networking sites and Twitter were the only way for protestors to get information and keep in touch. That’s what made Erdogan declare Twitter ‘a public threat.’ It might sound funny, but right now 29 youths are arrested in Izmir, because they sent Twitter messages,” said Alex Alexiev.

http://www.focus-fen.net

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey PM to continue with Istanbul park plan

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said his government will go ahead with controversial plans to overhaul a small park in central Istanbul, despite mass protests against the redevelopment in Taksim square.

Speaking to reporters in Tunis after a meeting with his Tunisian counterpart on Thursday, Erdogan said some groups were manipulating what had started as an environmental protest.

“Among the protesters, there are extremists, some of them implicated in terrorism,” he told reporters.

Turkish PM also added that those who caused damage as part of the Taksim Gezi Park protests were the same as those who attacked he US embassy in Ankara four months ago, in which one security guard and one attacker were killed. Ecevit Sanli, a member of the outlawed Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C), conducted the attack.

No outright apology

On the alleged excessive use of force against those protesting, Erdogan did not make an outright apology, and said that “the neccessary words” of regret had already been said by his deputy prime minister.

Al Jazeera talks to MP Bilal Macit of Turkey’s ruling party

Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc apologised for the use of excessive force by the police in protests on Tuesday.

“My deputy made the necessary statement and I expressed my sadness over the excessive use of tear gas,” said Erdogan, adding that rights can not be acquired by illegal methods.

Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught, reporting from Ankara, said Erdogan also stressed on the amount of vandalism caused by protesters on some infrastructure, saying that it “was scarecely in the name of environmentalism.”

Seven foreign nationals living in Turkey who are accused of helping to provoke the protests were detained on Wednesday.  

Evaluation procedures are continuing into the two Iranian citizens, two French, a Greek, a US citizen and a German, Turkey’s Interior Minister Muammer Güler said on Thursday.

Stocks fall

Turkish assets weakened following Erdogan’s latest remarks in Tunisia.

The main Istanbul share index fell over 8 percent, while the lira weakened to 1.90 against the dollar following Erdogan’s comments.

The protests in Turkey were sparked early June by the police break-up of a sit-in to prevent the demolition of a park in central Istanbul.

The demonstration spiralled into rallies by thousands denouncing what they say is the government’s increasingly authoritarian form of governing and its meddling in people’s lifestyles. 

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Turkey protests continue despite apology

Protests have continued in Turkey as demonstrators defied a government appeal to end deadly unrest in which two people have died.

On Tuesday, Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arnic apologised for “excessive violence” against protesters trying to save a park in Istanbul, a campaign which acted as catatlyst for deeper tensions within the country.

A meeting between the deputy prime minister and some of the protesters took place on Wednesday in Ankara. 

Police used tear gas and water cannon overnight and into Wednesday morning on hundreds of protesters, who ignored warnings to disperse in Istanbul, Ankara and the southeastern city of Hatay.

In Istanbul, thousands gathered peacefully at Taksim Square on Wednesday yelling defiance at Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who had earlier dismissed the protesters as “extremists” and “vandals”. 

At least 29 people were arrested in the coastal city of Izmir for encouraging rebellion over social media and tweeting “misleading and libellous information”, according to the state-run Anatolia news agency.

Police are still searching for 9 others who will be arrested on the same charges.

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh, reporting from Ankara, said that protests on Wednesday seem to be relatively calmer and than the previous day and the arrests are reflective of government accusations that Twitter is being used for spreading lies.

The Taksim Solidarity group held a press conference after their meeting with Arinc where they requested allowing for freedom of expression and the banning of tear gas.

The group said their findings indicated that during the protests four people have lost their eyes due to gas canisters and 2,319 have been injured.

Al Jazeera’s Andrew Simmons, reporting from Taksim Square in Istanbul, said some of the other demands being put include cancelling the demolition of Gezi park, the release of those arrested, the resignation of governors and police comissioners of Istanbul, Ankara and Hatay, and the opening of public spaces for protesting.

He said the protests have been mostly peaceful and violence is only sporadic, and described the mood at the square like that of a “picnic”.

Warning strikes

On Tuesday, thousands of public-sector labour union workers called for a two-day warning strike, which has not yet begun, in solidarity with the anti-government protesters.

Members of the workers union said they will join the ongoing rallies on Wednesday.

Two of the country’s deputy prime ministers have commented on the situation and have called for calm.

Speaking at the American-Turkish Council’s annual conference in Washington, also attended by US Vice President Joe Biden, Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said the government respects the right to non-violent protest and free speech, but that it must also protect its citizens against violence.

“There is a need for a strict distinction between the terrorist groups or illegal organisations versus citizens who are purely protesting on a non-violent basis,” he said on Wednesday.

Biden said that only the Turkish people can solve the problems behind the protests.

“Turkey’s future belongs to the people of Turkey and no one else. But the United States does not pretend to be indifferent to the outcome,” he said.

‘Excessive violence’

Earlier, Arnic apologised for “excessive violence” against protesters trying to save a park in Istanbul. 

He said the state had acted harshly when it sent in police to clear environmentalists participating in a sit-in protest to save Istanbul’s Gezi Park last week.

Origins of Turkey’s Occupy Gezi Park

“At the beginning of the protests, the excessive violence used against people concerned about the environment was wrong. It was unfair and I apologise to those citizens,” he said.

“The government has learnt its lesson from what happened. We do not have the right and cannot afford to ignore people. Democracies cannot exist without opposition.”

However, Arinc refused to reconcile with those who joined the later anti-government demonstrations.

“The ones who caused the destruction to the public property and the ones who are trying to restrict people’s freedoms, we do not need to apologise,” he said.

Arinc was speaking after a meeting with President Abdullah Gul who, contrary to Erdogan, has praised the mostly peaceful protesters as expressing their democratic rights.

Yavuz Baydar, a political analyst for the Today Zaman newspaper, said the comments were significant and amounted to a rebuke for Erdogan from within his AK Party.

“Most probably [Gul and Arinc's comments] did not have the sanction of the prime minister,” Baydar told Al Jazeera, noting that both were among the founding fathers of the AK Party.”

“[Arinc] apologised clearly for the police brutality and the excessive use of tear gas, and he sent some ambiguous but clearly understood messages to Erdogan for his perceived arrogant speech.”

Police crackdown

Police arresting at least 20 people in the Istanbul district of Dolmabahce on Tuesday evening, Al Jazeera’s Gokhan Yivciger said. 

A 22-year-old man died during an anti-government protest in a city near the border with Syria, with officials giving conflicting reports on what caused his death.

Spotlight

Follow Al Jazeera’s coverage of growing political unrest

The Hatay province governor’s office initially said Abdullah Comert was shot on Monday during a demonstration in the city of Antakya. 

It backtracked after the province’s chief prosecutor’s office said an autopsy showed Comert had received a blow to the head and that there was no trace of a bullet wound.

Another man was killed in an accident with a taxi in Istanbul.

Despite facing the biggest challenge to his rule since he came to office in 2002, Erdogan left Turkey earlier on Monday on an official visit to Morocco, where he insisted the situation in his country was “calming down”.

He earlier rejected talk of a “Turkish Spring” uprising by Turks who accuse him of trying to impose religious reforms on the secular state, and dismissed the protesters as “vandals”, stressing that he was democratically elected.

Erdogan is in Algeria on the second day of a four-day official visit to north Africa and is expected to return to Turkey on Thursday.

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Turkey Protests Reveal Wider Political Struggle

LONDON (VOA) — The continuing demonstrations in Turkey started as a protest against plans to develop a popular square in Istanbul that is a symbol of Turkey’s commitment to secularism. But analysts say the protests have expanded to cover a variety of other issues, including frustration with the ruling party’s attitude toward large segments of the population that do not support it.

The protests have been focused on Istanbul’s Taksim Square, sparked by a government-backed development plan. But analysts say that’s not what it’s about anymore.

“The real agenda behind the protests is to say to the government, ‘Look, enough is enough’,” said Gül Berna Özcan, a Turkey expert at Royal Holloway University of London. She said secular Turks feel angry and helpless.

“The key issue is that the AK Party missed a great opportunity. It could have proven to its skeptics in Turkey and elsewhere in the world that they respect democracy, and democracy and Islam could coexist and enhance each other,” she said.

The AK Party is the Islamist-inspired movement of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has been in power for 10 years and was re-elected two years ago with 50 percent of the vote – a huge margin by European standards. It is his residence that protesters have put under siege, angry about policies that restrict the availability of alcohol, ban public displays of affection and intimidate the press, among other things.

Senior lecturer Bill Park of London’s King’s College said, “What you have here is what some people in Turkey call ‘the other 50 percent’ – that is, the 50 percent that don’t vote for the ruling party, that are now expressing a wider frustration.”

And the frustration is being expressed across the country, reflecting concern about a slide toward Islamism and what analysts call a lack of concern the government shows for the roughly half of the country that remains staunchly secular.

Prime Minister Erdogan fueled that feeling Monday, leaving as scheduled for a North Africa trip starting in Morocco, and dismissing the protesters as “naïve” and “emotional,” and manipulated by “extremist elements.”

Erdogan predicted the protests will be over by the time he returns in a few days.

Analysts are not so sure.

“It’s not so much that it’s a battle for the soul of Turkey, but there are two souls in competition. And the real challenge here, I think, is how, whoever is in power in Turkey, Turkey finds ways to be politically more inclusive,” said Park.

The experts say there is something of a tradition of intolerance for the opposition in Turkey, regardless of who is in power. But continuing protests will not help the prime minister’s desire to change the constitution and increase his own power, nor Turkey’s effort to join the European Union. Professor Park says the best hope is that people around the prime minister convince him to end the polarization and address his opponents’ concerns in a constructive way.

By Al Pessin

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey deputy PM sorry for ‘excessive force’

Twenty more protesters were arrested after a fifth day of protests, even as Turkey’s deputy prime minister has apologised for “excessive violence” against protesters trying to save a park in Istanbul.

It is unclear whether the remarks made on Tuesday by Bulent Arnic, who is standing in for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan while he is out of the country, were towing an official government line. 

He admitted the state had acted harshly when it sent in police to clear environmentalists participating in a sit-in protest to save Istanbul’s Gezi Park last week.

“At the beginning of the protests, the excessive violence used against people concerned about the environment was wrong. It was unfair and I apologise to those citizens,” he said.

“The government has learnt its lesson from what happened. We do not have the right and cannot afford to ignore people. Democracies cannot exist without opposition.”

However, he refused to reconcile with those who joined the later anti-government demonstrations, in which two people died.

“The ones who caused the destruction to the public property and the ones who are trying to restrict people’s freedoms, we do not need to apologise,” he said.

Arinc was speaking after a meeting with President Abdullah Gul who, contrary to Erdogan, has praised the mostly peaceful protesters as expressing their democratic rights.

Yavuz Baydar, a political analyst for the daily daily Today’s Zaman, told Al Jazeera that the comments were significant and marked a rebuke against Erdogan from within his own party.

“Most probably [the president and deputy prime minister's comments] are without the sanction of the prime minister,” he said, adding that both were amongst the founding father of the ruling AKP.

“[Arinc] apologised clearly for the police brutality and the excessive use of teargas, and also he sent some ambiguous but clearly understood missives to Erdogan for his perceived arrogant speech, and also he raised the possibility of referendum over [the] Taksim building project.”

Two dead

Thousands of people have been injured in five days of demonstrations, as police attempted to contain protesters with teargas, water cannons and baton charges. The latest crackdown in Istanbul came on Tuesday evening, with police arresting at least 20 people in the Istanbul district of Dolmabahce, according to Al Jazeera’s Gokhan Yivciger. 

A 22-year-old man died during an anti-government protest in a city near the border with Syria, with officials giving conflicting reports on what caused his death.

The Hatay province governor’s office initially said Abdullah Comert was shot on Monday during a demonstration in the city of Antakya. 

It backtracked after the province’s chief prosecutor’s office said an autopsy showed Comert had received a blow to the head and that there was no trace of a gunshot wound.

Governor Celalettin Lekesiz did not respond to a journalist’s question as to whether the man may have died after being hit in the head by a gas canister.

Another man was killed in an accident with a taxi in Istanbul.

Two-day strike

Thousands of public sector workers began a two-day strike on Tuesday in solidarity with the anti-government protesters.

The confederation, which has an estimated 240,000 members in 11 unions, said the strike would last until Wednesday.

Spotlight

Follow Al Jazeera’s coverage of growing political unrest

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh, reporting from the capital Ankara, said that the strike was significant: “They are trying to send a message, that this is not just youth on the streets, this is not just about a park or individual demands – this is about something bigger.”

Turkey’s Human Rights Foundation claimed more than 1,000 protesters were subjected “to ill-treatment and torture” by police.

Despite facing the biggest challenge to his rule since he came to office in 2002, Erdogan left Turkey earlier on Monday on an official visit to Morocco, where he insisted the situation in his country was “calming down”.

He earlier rejected talk of a “Turkish Spring” uprising by Turks who accuse him of trying to impose religious reforms on the secular state, and dismissed the protesters as “vandals”, stressing that he was democratically elected.

Erdogan has blamed the protests on “extremists”, “dissidents” and the main opposition Republican People’s Party. 

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Workers strike in support of Turkey protests

Thousands of public sector workers in Turkey are on a two-day strike in support of anti-government demonstrations.

The strike was called by the The Public Workers Unions Confederation in response to “state terror implemented against mass protests across the country”. It said the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had “shown once again … enmity to democracy”.

The confederation, which has an estimated 240,000 members in 11 unions, said the strike would last for two days.

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh reporting from the capital Ankara said that the strike call was significant: “They are trying to send a message, that this is not just youth on the streets, this is not just about a park or individual demands – this is about something bigger.”

However, she said that the success of the strike remained to be seen: “It has to be said that unions are not that strong in Turkey. This is going to be a test to show that they are able to deliver on what they say.”

Shot dead

The workers’ strike comes in the wake of four days of mass protests against the Islamic-rooted government of Erdogan. At least two people have died in the demonstrations.

One of the dead was reportedly shot in the head during a protest in Antakya, close to the Syrian border. The NTV television channel identified him as Abdullah Comert, 22. It was not known who opened fire.

Barricades of rubble hindered traffic in Istanbul alongside the Bosphorus waterway on Monday, blocking entry into the area around Taksim Square.

In Ankara, police charged at mostly teenage demonstrators and scattered them using teargas and water cannons. 

The Dogan news agency said up to 500 people were detained in Ankara on Monday, and Turkey’s Fox television reported 300 others were detained in Izmir, Turkey’s third-largest city.

‘Police abuse’

Social media was awash with reports and videos of police abuse. Turkey’s Human Rights Foundation claimed more than 1,000 protesters were subjected “to ill-treatment and torture” by police.

Despite facing the biggest challenge to his rule since he came to office in 2002, Erdogan left Turkey earlier on Monday on an official visit to Morocco, where he insisted the situation in his country was “calming down”.

He earlier rejected talk of a “Turkish Spring” uprising by Turks who accuse him of trying to impose religious reforms on the secular state, and dismissed the protesters as “vandals”, stressing that he was democratically elected.

Erdogan has blamed the protests on “extremists”, “dissidents” and the main opposition Republican People’s Party. 

“The situation is now calming down … On my return from this visit, the problems will be solved,” he said in Rabat.

“The Republican People’s Party and other dissidents have a hand in these events.”

The unrest began as a local outcry against plans to redevelop Gezi Park, a rare green spot adjoining Taksim Square.

After a heavy police response it grew into wider anti-government protests in Istanbul, Ankara and other cities.

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Fadi Hakura, a Turkey analyst at the Chatham House think-tank in London, said: “I think that the prime minister has really adopted a really defiant and confrontational approach towards the protests taking place in Istanbul and across Turkey.

“He has already accused them of being extremists; he has suggested there’s a link between the protesters and foreign plotters.”

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Turkey protests turn violent for fourth day

Riot police are back on the streets of Turkey’s largest city, Istanbul, as anti-government protests continue for a forth night in several cities.

Thousands of people have gathered on Monday in the central Taksim Square, where demonstrations triggered by redevelopment plans for the area began last week.

Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught said a helicopter with a searchlight was hovering over the crowds and a tear gas canister had been thrown into the square, raising tension where protests during the day were peaceful with protesters waving flags, dancing and chanting slogans.

A few kilometres away, police fired tear gas to disperse protesters massing near Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s office in the city centre and the nearby stadium of Besiktas football team.

Police also clashed with protesters in the capital, Ankara.

Al Jazeera’s Idil Gungor reported that police fired tear gas and used pressurised water against demonstrators who chanted slogans. Most of the people in the crowd were secondary-school students, she said.

Medical sources say hundreds of people have been injured in four days of clashes, and rights groups have accused police of using excessive force.

Dissidents blamed

Erdogan said on Monday on a visit to Morocco that the situation in his country is “now calming down” and accused political “dissidents” of inciting the protests.

“On my return from this visit, the problems will be solved,” he told a news conference in Rabat. “The Republican People’s Party [CHP] and other dissidents have a hand in these events.”

He is set to return to Turkey on Thursday after an official four-day tour of the Maghreb.

The opposition CHP has denied involvement in the violence.

“Today the people on the street across Turkey are not exclusively from the CHP, but from all ideologies and from all parties,” Mehmet Akif Hamzacebi, a senior party member, said.

The unrest erupted on Friday when trees were torn down at a park in Taksim Square under government plans to redevelop the area, but widened into a broad show of defiance against the governing, Islamist-rooted AK Party.

Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in power, turning its once crisis-prone economy into the fastest-growing in Europe.

He remains by far Turkey’s most popular politician, but critics point to what they see as his authoritarianism and religiously conservative meddling in private lives in the secular republic.

Tighter restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have also provoked protests.

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Commentary: In Turkey, Tear Gas Instead Of Dialogue

It started all too typically, with a rather minor event. Last week, a few thousand people protested against plans to allow construction of a shopping mall in a park near Istanbul’s central Taksim Square. An unexpectedly harsh crackdown by police armed with tear gas provoked tens of thousands more to pour into the area. Soon the protests spread to other districts of Istanbul and on to the major Turkish cities of Ankara and Izmir.

By the second and third days of unrest, the protests began to focus more on the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and less on the plans to raze the park near Istanbul’s Taksim Square. The protests, though largely limited to Turkey’s three largest cities, seemed to have united young and old, secular and conservative-religious, and rich and poor.

ALSO READ: As Turkish Protests Rage, Baku Watches With Interest

Right after the first crackdown, the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party’s leading figures — such as Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc and Istanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas — were conciliatory and apologetic. “Protesting is the people’s right,” said Arinc. “We should have convinced the people instead of using tear gas.”

But his boss, Prime Minister Erdogan, took the tough approach, as he increasingly has during his decade-long tenure. He called the protesters a “bunch of hooligans” being used by the opposition. “We won’t yield to a few looters coming to that square and provoking our people,” Erdogan said.

Many people, including leading political scientists in Turkey, have noted that Erdogan’s personal style has grown alarmingly authoritarian since the AK party came to power in 2003. Comfortably ruling with a majority of 40- to 50-plus percent of the nation’s votes — an exception to crisis-driven governments of recent decades — the AK party has undertaken economic and political reforms that no other party has been able to pull off. Turkey is now the 16th-largest economy in the world, boasting high single-digit growth that might be envied in many developed countries.

WHAT’S REALLY Fueling The Turkish Protests?

Amid the outpouring of comments from Turks found on social networks and mass media in recent days, not many expressed concern about the economy. “Thank you for the flourishing economy, Sir!” read a tweet addressing Erdogan from an angry protester in Ankara. “But we have enough of your strong-arm way of treating people like slaves.” And one very short commentary by Gulse Birsel, one of Turkey’s most prominent writers and artists, quickly went viral. She summarized the feeling of the protesters in one striking title: “Ohhhh! Enough is enough!”
In the last 10 years, the AK party and Erdogan — overconfident of the success of their political and economic reforms, as well as the rising share of national votes that has let them rule without any need to be in coalition with other parties — have generally ignored concerns and criticisms of their policies towards the military, the new constitution, and Ankara’s foreign policy toward Syria.

Many political scientists, such as Martin Lipset and Giovani Sartori, note that the longer a government rules, the more its rulers tend to use its powers in an authoritarian way. Incidentally, Kemal Dervis, a former Turkish economy minister and a former director of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), in a recent interview with CNN Turk warned the government that too much self-confidence and disregard for public opinion and criticism could provoke a dangerous political crisis even in good economic times.

It seems that Turkish developments over the next weeks and months will depend largely on Erdogan’s decision to be cohesive or not. He might listen to those who are critical of him and his government’s policies. Or he might simply continue following a confrontational policy, as he did in the first days of the recent unrest by referring to protesters as “extremist elements.”

On the fourth day of demonstrations, Kadir Gursel, a prominent commentator, wrote in the “Milliyet” daily: “Nobody should misunderstand occasional calls in the demonstration for the government to resign. It’s about discontent and protest, not about overthrowing a government that has received 50 percent of the popular vote. In the next few days we will see if the message has been received.”

Meanwhile, the conservative “Zaman” daily quoted President Abdullah Gul — also from the ruling AK party but rumored to be a more cohesive personality than the prime minister — calling for calm and saying “the messages of goodwill have been received.”

The author is an RFE/RL regional director

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Erdogan blames ‘extremists’ for Turkey riots

The Turkish prime minister has blamed ‘extremist elements’ for the riots that have swept his country in recent days.

Al Jazeera’s Emre Temel said Tayyip Recep Erdogan on Monday also accused the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) of playing an active role and working together with ‘extremist elements’.

The prime minister said intelligence services were also investigating foreign links to the demonstrations. “People who are talking about a ‘Turkish Spring’ in their coverage of events do not know Turkey,” he said.

His comments came as he prepared to fly to Morocco for the start of a tour of North Africa, with commentators expressing surprise at his decision not to cancel the trip.

Meanwhile, the Associated Press quoted the local Dogan news agency as saying that police fired tear gas at a group of protesters in an area close to Erdogan’s offices in Besiktas neighbourhood of Istanbul on Monday, as anti-government demonstrations stretched into a fourth straight day. The protesters responded by hurling back stones.

However, Taksim Square, the focus of the demonstrations, was quiet in the aftermath of last night’s fierce confrontations. Besiktas neighbourhood had witnessed the worst clashes as protesters used a mechanical digger to break police lines in an attempt to gain access to a government office.

Turkey’s main share index fell about 8 per cent on opening on Monday as traders reacted to the protests. The Turkish lira was at an 18-month low against the US dollar.

Weekend of riots

For much of Sunday, Taksim Square had remained peaceful with little obvious police presence before the situation got out of hand towards the evening. In Besiktas, riot police fired tear gas and water cannons to keep crowds away from Erdogan’s office in Dolmabahce Palace.

Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught, reporting from near Erdogan’s office late on Sunday, said the demonstrators used a mechanical digger and trucks to break through police lines, right up to a government building. 

“But police redoubled their efforts, pushing the protesters back. I have not seen any evidence of live fire, but some have [protesters] been seriously injured by gas canisters fired at them.”

Nationwide protests

Muammer Guler, the interior minister, told the Hurriyet newspaper that there had been more than 200 demonstrations in 67 cities.Hundreds of injuries have been reported.

Erdogan on Sunday renewed his calls for an end to the disturbances, saying: “If you love this country, if you love Istanbul, do not fall for these games.”

The opposition Republican People’s Party has denied involvement in the violence.

“Today the people on the street across Turkey are not exclusively from the CHP, but from all ideologies and from all parties,” Mehmet Akif Hamzacebi, a senior party member, said.

The unrest erupted on Friday when trees were torn down at a park in Istanbul’s main Taksim Square under government plans to redevelop the area, but widened into a broad show of defiance against the governing, Islamist-rooted AK Party.

Conservative meddling

Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in power, turning its once crisis-prone economy into the fastest-growing in Europe.

He remains by far Turkey’s most popular politician, but critics point to what they see as his authoritarianism and religiously conservative meddling in private lives in the secular republic.

Tighter restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have also provoked protests.

Erdogan, appearing on Sunday on television for the fourth time in less than 36 hours, justified the restrictions on alcohol as for the good of people’s health.

“I want them to know that I want these [restrictions] for the sake of their health … Whoever drinks alcohol is an alcoholic,” he said.

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Illinois State Senate Passes Resolution Critical of Turkey

In a buzzer-beating vote, the Illinois Senate passed a non-binding resolution Friday criticizing the Turkish government’s treatment of Eastern Orthodox religious leaders. The measure, approved just before lawmakers ended the spring session, included an amendment recognizing Turkey’s recent efforts to address Orthodox Christian grievances.

The measure, an un-amended version of which passed the Illinois House in 2007, appeared stuck in committee weeks ago even though a majority of senators were co-sponsors.

Orthodox leaders said the resolution was an important statement on worldwide religious freedom. Church officials criticized Turkey for confiscating church lands, closing an important religious school and imposing citizenship requirements on the church’s patriarch.

Turkey, a predominantly Muslim nation that is the historical home of Orthodox Christianity, has returned land around the shuttered school and made it easier for church leaders to become Turkish citizens in recent years.

By Mitch Smith
http://www.chicagotribune.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Simmering Anger At Erdogan’s Authoritarianism Boils Over in Turkey

ISTANBUL (Reuters) — Turkey’s most violent riots in decades may have been started by the destruction of a small Istanbul park, but they have exploded in a show of defiance at what many see as the creeping authoritarianism of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan.

In power for more than a decade, Erdogan’s Islamist-rooted AK Party has increased its share of the vote in each of the past three elections, ushered in unprecedented political stability and overseen some of the fastest economic growth in Europe.

Now in his last term as prime minister, Erdogan is trying to leave his stamp on Turkey by recasting foreign policy, overhauling the constitution and even transforming the ancient Istanbul skyline.

But some, including former supporters, accuse him of growing increasingly authoritarian, muzzling the media, tightening his AK party’s grip on state institutions and putting religion at the centre of politics in violation of Turkey’s secular constitution.

“If it were up to the prime minister, I would be wearing a head scarf,” said Tugba Bitiktas, a 25-year-old unemployed university graduate, before she joined anti-government protests in central Istanbul late on Saturday.

“All this government worries about is rewarding its own. Those with a different voice are marginalized. That’s what I’m protesting,” she said, before donning swimming goggles and a surgical mask to stave off the effects of tear gas.

Bitiktas was one of tens of thousands protesting in Istanbul, where more than 1,000 people were hurt in three days of clashes with riot police. Similar protests were staged in the capital Ankara and in cities across the country.

Erdogan accused the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) of stoking the demonstrations, while other government officials warned the unrest was a plot to set the ground for a military intervention, as has occurred in the past.

But the protesters come from a range of political backgrounds, from environmentalists to nationalists and the hard left-wing.

The ferocity of the protests must have jolted Erdogan, whose party has won the biggest share of Turkish votes in decades and is now said to have his sights on the presidency before his self-imposed three-term limit expires in 2015.

The 59-year-old former Istanbul mayor is campaigning for constitutional change that would give executive powers to the largely ceremonial presidency.

Erdogan has tackled some of Turkey’s thorniest problems, including a major peace initiative this year to end a 28-year war with Kurdish militants. He is an important U.S. partner in efforts to end the civil war in Syria, though opinion polls show government policy towards Turkey’s neighbor is unpopular.

FROM FOUR TO THOUSANDS

The centre of the protests is Istanbul’s Taksim Square and the adjacent Gezi Park, a green patch in Europe’s fastest-growing city which dedicates just 1.5 percent of its land to public parks, according to the World Cities Culture Report.

A group of four protesters trying to stop a handful of trees from being cut down for a road-expansion project mushroomed last week into thousands of people, who refashioned Gezi into a festival campsite with concerts, speeches and yoga sessions.

They oppose a plan to pedestrianise Taksim and raze Gezi Park to rebuild a 19th Century Ottoman barracks that once marked the outer limits of the city. In its new form, Erdogan has said the ground floor of the replica barracks could serve as shopping centre or museum, topped with luxury flats.

“When citizens are not consulted about even a park, then that country is not democratic,” said Betul Tanbay, professor at Bosphorus University and member of the Taksim Platform that has campaigned for more than year for a project based on consensus.

“This has now gone beyond tunnels and parks into a wider movement. There is a lot of dissatisfaction among a large segment of people,” she said.

Taksim is just one of the government’s construction projects that include the world’s biggest airport, a $ 3 billion third bridge across the Bosphorus and a $ 10 billion shipping canal that would turn half of Istanbul into an island.

Aggrandising projects, Erdogan’s critics say, distract from more pressing issues in the nation of 76 million.

HISTORY OF PROTEST

Taksim has a particular resonance. While other Istanbul squares embody the grandeur of the Islamic Ottoman Empire, Taksim pays homage to the secular ideals of the republic founded in 1923 after the empire collapsed. More recently, the square was the site of a 1977 massacre of up to 40 leftists during a May Day rally.

“Taksim carries enormous significance for different circles … To bulldoze Taksim without any real social consensus is to harm an important public space not just for Istanbul, but for all of Turkey,” said Eyup Muhcu, head of the Chamber of Architects, in an interview before the protests.

Celebrations were banned in Taksim for decades until Erdogan allowed them again in 2010, only to shut the square this May 1 because of the construction, prompting weeks of small protests that snowballed towards this weekend’s riots.

As the protests gathered steam, Erdogan appeared to dig in, ignoring an interim Istanbul court ruling on Friday that blocked work on the barracks project as judges sought more testimony.

He went on to announce the demolition of an iconic Taksim auditorium dedicated to Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish Republic, and the erection of a mosque.

Efforts to build a mosque at Taksim have been floated for at least 40 years but never gained enough support. “I don’t need the permission of the (opposition), and I don’t need it from a few looters. The voters already gave me permission for this,” Erdogan said.

THOUSANDS JAILED

Building a mosque in Taksim would have been unimaginable a decade ago. Turkey’s military, self-appointed guardians of secularism, kept a short rein on civilian governments, staging three outright coups and forcing a fourth government to resign.

With popular backing, Erdogan’s government has tamed the army over the past decade, mainly through legal cases that jailed dozens of top brass for their alleged roles in plots against Erdogan and his predecessors.

That has allowed him to express more comfortably his religious sentiments, which are widely reflected in Turkey.

For much of the first half of his term in office, Erdogan focused on political reforms that aimed to bring Turkey in line with European Union political criteria. Kurdish cultural rights were granted, religious minorities enjoyed greater freedoms and the overall public discourse was expanded.

Despite the unrest of recent days, Erdogan remains Turkey’s most popular politician, with no obvious rival either within the ruling party or the opposition.

“Turkish secularism was too rigid to create harmony in society where you have a fairly observant religious population,” said Mustafa Akyol, the author of “Islam Without Extremes”.

“Secularists now fear Erdogan wants to reverse things, since he faces no challenges,” he said.

Since 2008, thousands of government opponents from across the political spectrum have been jailed, including university students, academics, lawyers, Kurdish activists, military officers and the alleged leaders of ultra-nationalist gangs.

“An administration that has no opposition for balance and no free media to monitor it can easily spin out of control,” said Kadri Gursel, a columnist for Milliyet newspaper and chairman of the International Press Institute’s Turkish committee.

“The Turkish experiment has now answered the question of whether moderate Islam and democracy are compatible without checks and balances.”

RELIGIOUS CONSERVATISM

Legislation passed last month that restricts alcohol sales raises fears over other areas of private life the government may seek to regulate, particularly after Erdogan acknowledged the law was based on the tenets of Islam.

Perhaps conscious of the concerns, he also said it was his constitutional duty to protect the health of young Turks.

Other issues, including two high-profile blasphemy cases, in which a well-known pianist and writer were separately given prison sentences for comments on Twitter, show the government is remodeling Turkey, Gursel said. “Turkey isn’t just becoming more religious. It’s being made more religious,” he said.

A colorful demonstration in the capital Ankara last month, when 200 people kissed to protest a morality campaign, ended in bloodshed when a group of Islamists carrying knives attacked protesters, stabbing one person, Hurriyet newspaper reported.

Over his tenure, Erdogan, who served a brief prison sentence for reading a poem deemed Islamic when he was mayor in the 1990s, has spoken more openly of raising a religious generation.

He has tried to restrict women’s access to abortions to encourage larger families and lifted curbs on the public expression of religion, such as once-strict limits on wearing the Islamic-style headscarf.

At the protest on Saturday, Metin, a 30-year-old doctor who described himself as a devout Muslim, said he had lost his faith in Erdogan over the years.

“I say my prayers, and I fast, and I considered voting for Erdogan in the past because I believed he would help the oppressed, since he had been,” Metin said, declining to give his last name because he feared reprisals at work.

“But now that he has the power, Erdogan has become the oppressor. He exploits our religious feelings for profit. He has become arrogant, and that is a sin.”

By Ayla Jean Yackley

Editing by Nick Tattersall and David Stamp.

Assyrian International News Agency

Thousands take part in protests across Turkey

Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets in Turkey’s four biggest cities and clashed with riot police firing tear gas for a third day in the fiercest anti-government demonstrations in years.

The din of car horns and residents banging pots and pans from balconies in support of the protests has been resonating across neighbourhoods in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city, and the capital, Ankara, late into the night.

For much of Sunday, the atmosphere in Istanbul’s Taksim Square was festive, with some people chanting for Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, to resign and others dancing. There was little obvious police presence.

But in the nearby Besiktas neighbourhood, riot police fired tear gas and water cannons to keep crowds away from Erdogan’s office in Dolmabahce Palace, a former Ottoman residence on the shores of the Bosphorus.

There were similar scenes in Ankara’s main Kizilar Square, with police raiding a shopping complex in the city’s centre and detaining several hundred.

Al Jazeera’s Anita McNaught, reporting from near Erdogan’s office in Istanbul late on Sunday night, said: “The demonstrators took a mechanical digger and used it to break through police lines, right up to a government building. They took large trucks as well, one of which was filled with paving stones.

“But the police came back and redoubled their efforts to contain them, pushing the protesters back. I have not seen any evidence of live fire, but some have been seriously injured by gas canisters fired at them.”

Nationwide protests

Muammer Guler, Turkey’s interior minister, said on Sunday there had been more than 200 demonstrations in 67 cities around the country, according to the Hurriyet newspaper.

A doctors’ union in Ankara said that more than 400 civilians were injured there including some with serious head injuries.

Rights groups have complained about what Amnesty International, the UK-based rights organisation, called a “disgraceful” heavy-handed response by police to the demonstrations.

The unrest erupted on Friday when trees were torn down at a park in Istanbul’s main Taksim Square under government plans to redevelop the area, but widened into a broad show of defiance against the governing, Islamist-rooted AK Party.

In comments on Sunday, Erdogan accused the main secular opposition party of inciting the crowds, whom he called “a few looters”, and said the protests were aimed at depriving the AK Party of votes as elections begin next year.

He renewed his calls for an end to the disturbances, saying: “If you love this country, if you love Istanbul, do not fall for these games.”

Erdogan said the plans to remake Taksim Square, long a rallying point for mass demonstrations, would go ahead, including the construction of a new mosque and the rebuilding of a replica Ottoman-era barracks.

He said the protests had nothing to do with the plans.

“It’s entirely ideological,” he said in an interview broadcast on Turkish television.

“The main opposition party which is making resistance calls on every street is provoking these protests … This is about my ruling party, myself and the looming municipal elections in Istanbul and efforts to make the AK Party lose votes here.”

Turkey is due to hold local and presidential elections next year in which Erdogan is expected to stand, followed by parliamentary polls in 2015.

Erdogan’s policies blamed

The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) denied orchestrating the unrest, blaming Erdogan’s policies.

“Today the people on the street across Turkey are not exclusively from the CHP, but from all ideologies and from all parties,” Mehmet Akif Hamzacebi, a senior party member, said.

“What Erdogan has to do is not to blame CHP but draw the necessary lessons from what happened.”

The protests, started by a small group of environmental campaigners, expanded when police used force to eject them from the park on Taksim Square.

As word spread online, the demonstrations drew in a wide range of people of all ages from across the political and social spectrum.

The ferocity of the police response in Istanbul shocked Turks, as well as tourists caught up in the unrest in one of the world’s most visited destinations.

It has drawn rebukes from the US, EU and international rights groups.

Helicopters fired tear gas canisters into residential neighbourhoods and police used tear gas to try to smoke people out of buildings.

Footage on YouTube showed one protester being hit by an armoured police lorry as it charged a barricade.

Conservative meddling

Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in power, turning its once crisis-prone economy into the fastest-growing in Europe.

He remains by far Turkey’s most popular politician, but critics point to what they see as his authoritarianism and religiously conservative meddling in private lives in the secular republic.

Tighter restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have also provoked protests.

Concern that government policy is allowing Turkey to be dragged into the conflict in neighbouring Syria by the West has also led to peaceful demonstrations.

Erdogan, appearing on Sunday on television for the fourth time in less than 36 hours, justified the restrictions on alcohol as for the good of people’s health.

“I want them to know that I want these [restrictions] for the sake of their health … Whoever drinks alcohol is an alcoholic,” he said.

Ahmet Davutoglu, foreign minister, warned in a Twitter message: “The continuation of these protests … will bring no benefits but will harm the reputation of our country which is admired both in the region and the world.”

Guler, the interior minister, estimated the cost at more than 20 million Turkish liras ($ 10m).

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Turkey protesters clash with police

Police have fired tear gas and used water cannon to disperse protesters in the Turkish capital on the third day of demonstrations against the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Authorities took the measures to stop around 1,000 protesters who were attempting to march to the high-security prime minister’s office on Sunday.

The protesters hurled stones and other items towards the police in Kizilay district while calling for the government to step down.

Meanwhile, thousands of people gathered for peaceful demonstrations in Istanbul’s Taksim Square, where police clashed with protesters a day earlier.

The demonstrations form the biggest public outcry against Erdogan’s government since it assumed power in 2002.

The nationwide unrest began as a local protest last week against plans to redevelop a park in Taksim Square, but after a heavy-handed police response, it quickly snowballed into broader demonstrations against what critics say is the government’s increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

Hundreds detained

Interior Minister Muammer Guler said more than 1,700 people had been detained in protests that have spread to 67 cities, though most have since been released.

“A large majority of the detainees were released after being questioned and identified,” he said in remarks carried by the state-run Anatolia news agency.

Protesters clashed with police in Izmir and Adana, Turkey’s third and fourth biggest cities, on Sunday.

There were also confrontations between police and protesters near Erdogan’s office in a former Ottoman palace in Istanbul.

The ferocity of the police response in Istanbul on Saturday shocked Turks, as well as tourists caught up in the unrest in one of the world’s most visited destinations.

It has drawn rebukes from the US, European Union and international rights groups.

Helicopters fired tear gas canisters into residential neighbourhoods and police used tear gas to try to smoke people out of buildings. Footage on YouTube showed one protester being hit by an armoured police truck as it charged a barricade.

‘Extreme’ response

Erdogan admitted there may have been some cases of “extreme” police action.

“It is true that there have been some mistakes, extremism in police response,” he said.

However, calling the protesters “a few looters”, the prime minister remained defiant, pledging to push forward with the plans to redevelop Taksim Square.

Erdogan singled out the Republican People’s Party (CHP) for attack over a dispute he described as ideological.

“We think that the main opposition party which is making resistance calls on every street is provoking these protests,”
Erdogan said on Turkish television.

The government is planning to revamp the Gezi Park and tear down trees to construct a new mosque and rebuild a replica Ottoman-era barracks, which protesters fear will be turned into a shopping mall.

“This reaction is no longer about the ripping out 12 trees.This is based on ideology,” said Erdogan, whose conservative
vision for the nation has angered more liberal Turks.

Referring to the planned mosque, he added: “Obviously I will not ask for permission for this from the head of CHP or a few looters.”

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Turkey braces for third day of protests

Turkey was braced for a third day of anti-government demonstrations following two days of battles between police and protesters, with unrest spreading to 48 cities.

Riot police pulled back on Saturday after being accused of heavyhanded tactics, but there were fresh clashes near the offices of the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the capital Ankara.

Riot police with electric shock batons chased stone-throwing demonstrators into side streets and shops in the Kizilay district.

There were also protests in the Aegean coastal city Izmir.

During the day, crowds of protesters in Istanbul chanting “shoulder to shoulder against fascism” and “government resign” marched on Taksim Square in one of the largest demonstrations against Erdogan’s government.

Clashes also raged on during the night, with thousands marching through Turkey’s largest city against the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

What began as disquiet over a development project in Istanbul has escalated into widespread anger against what critics say is the government’s increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

They cite the restrictions on alcohol and warnings against public displays of affection.

As night fell on Saturday, broken glass, rocks and an overturned car littered Istanbul’s Taksim Square, where hundreds were injured in clashes the day before.

Muammer Guler, the interior minister, said police had detained 939 protesters in over 90 demonstrations in 48 cities, adding that some of them were released after being interviewed.

He said 53 civilians and 26 police were injured. One of the injured civilians was in intensive care unit at an Istanbul hospital..

Police withdraw

The Istanbul protest began last Monday as a peaceful sit-in at Gezi Park across Taksim Square. The demonstrators had been preventing workers from razing some of the 600 trees in the park, the last patch of green in the commercial area, to make way for the restoration of Ottoman-era military barracks.

Residents fear that the barracks will be turned into a shopping centre.

The demonstration soon took a violent turn, with police shooting tear gas at the protesters.

Al Jazeera’s Isil Sariyuce reports on the opposition’s growing fears over limits on personal freedoms

Earlier on Saturday, thousands of protesters in Istanbul celebrated a victory as police withdrew from Taksim Square.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, AKP’s vice president of foreign affairs, told Al Jazeera that protests turned violent with demonstrators attacking police cars and destroying property.

But he admitted that police officers used “excessive force” against demonstrators and said it would be investigated.

“It is true police used excessive force and this is not acceptable,” he said.

“We cannot accept this because we have been trying to democratise this country.”

Erdogan defiant

Erdogan also admitted on Saturday there may have been some cases of “extreme” police action.

“I call on the protesters to stop their demonstrations immediately,” he said in a televised address.

“It is true that there have been some mistakes, extremism in police response.”

Erdogan, however, remained defiant, pledging to push forward with the plans to redevelop Taksim Square.

“Every four years we hold elections and this nation makes its choice.

Erdogan said the redevelopment of Gezi Park was being used as an excuse for the unrest and warned the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), which had been given permission to hold a rally in Istanbul, against stirring tensions.

Both the UK and US called on Turkey’s government to exercise restraint.

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Mass protests rage on in Turkey

Turkey has seen a second day of running battles between police and protesters, with demonstrators taking over a central square in Istanbul.

Riot police pulled back on Saturday after being accused of heavyhanded tactics, but there were fresh clashes near the offices of the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The unrest has spread to other cities across the country, with police on Saturday blocking a group of demonstrators from marching to parliament and the prime minister’s office in Ankara.

Stone-throwing protesters clashed with police in the Kizilay district of the Turkish capital as a helicopter fired tear gas into the crowds.

Riot police with electric shock batons chased demonstrators into side streets and shops.

There were also protests in the Aegean coastal city Izmir.

During the day, crowds of protesters in Istanbul chanting “shoulder to shoulder against fascism” and “government resign” marched on Taksim Square in one of the largest demonstrations against Erdogan’s government.

Clashes raged on during the night, with thousands of people marching through Turkey’s largest city, some banging pots and pans as residents shouted support from the windows.

Others held up cans of beer in defiance of the recent alcohol law passed by the Islamist-rooted ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) that would bring severe restrictions to the sale and advertising of alcohol.

What began as an outcry against a local development project in Istanbul has escalated into widespread anger against what critics say is the government’s increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

The restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have also led to protests.

Concern that government policy is allowing Turkey to be dragged into the conflict in neighbouring Syria by the West has also sparked peaceful demonstrations.

As night fell on Saturday, broken glass, rocks and an overturned car littered Taksim Square, where hundreds were injured in clashes the day before.

A helicopter buzzed overhead as groups of mostly young men and women, bandanas or surgical masks tied around their mouths, used Facebook and Twitter on mobile phones to try to organise and regroup in side streets.

Police clashed with protesters who lit fires in the streets leading to Erdogan’s Istanbul office.

Muammer Guler, interior minister, said police had detained 939 protesters in over 90 demonstrations in 48 cities, adding that some of them were released after giving testimonies.

He said 53 citizens and 26 police officers were injured in the protests.

One of the injured civilians was in intensive care unit at an Istanbul hospital, Guler said.

Redevelopment plan

The Istanbul protest began late on Monday as a peaceful sit-in at Gezi Park across Taksim Square. The demonstrators had been preventing workers from razing some of the park’s 600 trees, the last patch of green in the commercial area, to make way for the restoration of Ottoman-era military barracks.

Residents fear that the barracks will be turned into a shopping mall.

The demonstration soon took a violent turn, however, with police shooting rounds of tear gas to disperse the protesters.

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh reports from Istanbul on Saturday’s protests in Turkey’s second largest city

Earlier on Saturday, thousands of protesters in Istanbul celebrated a victory as police withdrew from Taksim Square.

“Government, resign!” protesters shouted as riot police pulled back from area.

“We are here Tayyip, where are you?” they cried, shouting taunts aimed at the prime minister.
 
The protesters, including artists and political party representatives, were dancing and singing while some launched fireworks in celebration.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, AKP’s vice president of foreign affairs, told Al Jazeera that protests turned violent with demonstrators attacking police cars and destroying property.

But he admitted that police officers used “excessive force” against demonstrators and said it would be investigated.

“It is true police used excessive force and this is not acceptable,” he said.

“We cannot accept this because we have been trying to democratise this country.”

Erdogan’s remarks

Erdogan also admitted on Saturday there may have been some cases of “extreme” police action.

“I call on the protesters to stop their demonstrations immediately,” he said in a televised.

“It is true that there have been some mistakes, extremism in police response.”

The interior ministry said legal action would be taken against police officers acting “disproportionately”.

Erdogan, however, remained defiant, pledging to push forward with the plans to redevelop Taksim Square.

“If this is about holding meetings, if this is a social movement, where they gather 20, I will get up and gather 200,000 people. Where they gather 100,000, I will bring together one million from my party,” he said.

“Every four years we hold elections and this nation makes its choice.

“Those who have a problem with government’s policies can express their opinions within the framework of law and democracy.”

For his part, Abdullah Gul, Turkey’s president, said the protests had reached a “worrisome level” and called on police and the demonstrators to act with restraint.

Local media reported that Istanbul police were running short of tear-gas supplies, and that the units had been warned to use the gas sparingly.

Erdogan said the redevelopment of Gezi Park was being used as an excuse for the unrest and warned the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), which had been given permission to hold a rally in Istanbul, against stirring tensions.

Growing momentum

The protests so far have included a broad spectrum of people opposed to Erdogan and do not appear to have been organised by any political party.

CHP officials have called on its members not to take party flags with them to the protests, apparently concerned they would be held responsible for the violence.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the party’s leader, has accused Erdogan of behaving like a dictator. “Tens of thousands are saying no, they are opposing the dictator,” he said.

“The fact that you are the ruling party doesn’t mean you can do whatever you want.”

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh, reporting from Taksim Square on Saturday, said there was growing momentum against Erdogan.

“What protesters are telling us here is that they are angry about what they are describing as the stubborn reaction of the prime minister and the heavyhanded tactics of his police force.

“The protesters have been directing their anger both at the PM and also at the media. They say the media has sold out and is not covering these events.”

The US State Department said Turkey should uphold “fundamental freedoms of expression, assembly and association, which is what it seems these individuals were doing”.

The British foreign office urged Turkey “to exercise restraint and not to use tear gas indiscriminately”. 

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Turkey PM urges end to protests amid clashes

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called for an immediate end to the fiercest anti-government demonstrations for years, as thousands of protesters clashed with riot police in Istanbul and Ankara for a second day.

The unrest was triggered by government redevelopment plans of a park in Istanbul’s Taksim Square, long a venue for political protest, but has widened into a broader show of defiance against Erdogan and his government.

Police fired tear gas and water cannon down a major shopping street as crowds of protesters chanting “unite against fascism” and “government resign” on Saturday marched towards Taksim, where hundreds were injured in clashes a day earlier.

Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh, reporting from Taksim Sqaure said ”police are firing tear gas in every direction,” adding that the crackdown had further angered the protesters.

Minutes earlier, Ibrahin Kalin, chief adviser to the prime minister, told Al Jazeera that police had been ordered to leave the area. He said tear gas had been fired in response to a group of protesters attacking police as they were leaving the premises.

A police helicopter buzzed overhead as groups of mostly young men and women, bandanas or surgical masks tied around their mouths, used Facebook and Twitter on mobile phones to try to organise and regroup in side streets.

Chasing police

Al Jazeera’s Gokhan Yivciger said police had fired guns in the air after hundreds of people were chasing police vehicles as they were trying to leave the area. Thousands of people were converging on the square from different directions, he said.

The government has given permission to the main opposition party CHP to hold a public demonstration, he added.

Stone-throwing protesters also clashed with police firing tear gas in the Kizilay district of central Ankara. Further protests were planned in other centres including the Aegean coastal city of Izmir.

The demonstration at Taksim’s Gezi Park started late on Monday after trees were torn up to make way for redevelopment including building a shopping mall and the reconstruction of a former Ottoman army barracks.

Erdogan vowed to push ahead with the plans and said the issue was being used as an excuse to stoke tensions.

“Every four years we hold elections and this nation makes its choice,” he said in a speech broadcast on television.

“Those who have a problem with government’s policies can express their opinions within the framework of law and democracy … I am asking the protesters to immediately end these actions,” he said.

The opposition accused him of behaving like a dictator.

“Tens of thousands are saying no, they are opposing the dictator … The fact that you are the ruling party doesn’t mean
you can do whatever you want,” said Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP).

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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Fresh anti-government clashes hit Turkey

Police in the Turkish city of Istanbul have fired tear gas and water cannons against a group of protesters trying to reach a main square during a second day of anti-government demonstrations.

At least a thousand people had earlier marched across Istanbul’s Bosphorus Bridge from the Asian side of the Turkish city to support the anti-government protests.

Saturday’s violence came a day after police clashed with demonstrators in central Istanbul, wounding scores of people.  

At least 60 people were detained on Friday, as thousands of demonstrators massed on streets surrounding Istanbul’s central Taksim Square, long a venue for political unrest.

Broken glass and rocks were strewn across a main shopping street near the square.

The protest at Taksim’s Gezi Park started late on Monday after trees were torn up over a government redevelopment plan but has widened into a broader demonstration against what they see as an increasingly authoritarian government.

“The protesters are saying that this is not about trees anymore,” said Al Jazeera’s Rawya Rageh, reporting from Istanbul.

Growing disquiet

The unrest reflects growing disquiet at Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s administration and his Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party.

There have been protests against the government’s stance on the conflict in neighbouring Syria, a tightening of restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection.

However, Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in power, turning its economy from crisis-prone into Europe’s fastest-growing.

Per capita income has tripled in nominal terms since his party rose to power.

He also remains by far Turkey’s most popular politician, and is widely viewed as its most powerful leader since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded the modern secular republic on the ashes of the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago.

Erdogan is pushing ahead with a slew of multi-billion-dollar projects which he sees as embodying Turkey’s emergence as a major power.

They include a shipping canal, a giant mosque and a third Istanbul airport billed to be one of the world’s biggest.

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Turkmenistan, Turkey Ankara To Cooperate On Gas Deliveries

Turkey and Turkmenistan have signed an agreement on cooperation for the supply of Turkmen natural gas.

The accord was signed by officials from both governments in Ashgabat on May 30 during a visit by Turkish President Abdullah Gul, who was meeting with Turkmenistan’s President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov.

Both leaders also were expected to sign other bilateral accords during Gul’s three-day visit, which began a day earlier.

Gul, who was welcomed to Turkmenistan with a military parade, has been awarded the country’s highest state medal.

On May 31, Gul was expected to visit the Akhal-Teke horse farm on the southeastern edge of Ashgabat and to meet with Turkish entrepreneurs working in Turkmenistan.

Based on reporting by ITAR-TASS and Interfax

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Chaldeans Embark on Journey Back to Turkey

The European Chaldean [Assyrian] community has acted on the call of Turkey’s Culture Minister Ömer Çelik to return to Turkey.

After a series of negotiations conducted in France and Belgium, it was determined that 27 families would return to Herbole village in the southeastern province of Şırnak’s Silopi district as part of the first stage of the return process. If the required social and economic conditions are met, the number returning will increase.

Speaking to the Hürriyet Daily News, Aksu-Herbole village headman and reorganization committee head Petrus Karatay said there were about 4,000 people who migrated from Herbole to various European countries. Karatay said they were forced to leave the village due to the great obstacles they experienced.

“Syriacs and Chaldeans were exposed to injustice, cruelty, exclusion and insults. In recent years, the locals have displayed some positive improvements parallel to the progress in state authorities and the Kurdish movement. Of course there are still problems awaiting solutions. If the resolution process has positive results, we hope that our remaining problems will be solved as well,” Karatay said.

Karatay said Syriacs and Chaldeans had some property problems. “This is a group determined to maintain its old habits on this matter, but they cannot find the support they once found.”

By Vercihan Ziflioğlu
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey to Establish First Kurdish-language University

The formation of the Mesopotamia Foundation, which will establish Turkey’s first Kurdish-language university, was approved.

Founders of the university include Kurdish artist Sivan Perwer, human rights activists, academics and businessmen.

The university to be founded in Diyarbakir, a Kurdish populated province in eastern Turkey, will also provide education in the English, Armenian and Assyrian languages in the future.

Head of Board of Trustees of Mesopotamia Foundation Selim Olcer said, most probably the university will be named as “Amed”- name given to Diyarbakir in Kurdish, and added, “We aim contributing in Kurdish language and give education in mother tongue.”

http://www.worldbulletin.net

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Tries to Contain Fighting In Syria’s Kurdish Region

As debate continues over Turkey’s controversial Syrian policy, its uneasy relationship with Syria’s Kurds, a crucial element in the equation, goes largely unnoticed. Deadly clashes between the Democratic Union Party (PYD), the most powerful Syrian Kurdish group, and jihadist militias in the mostly Kurdish Syrian towns of Afrin and Tir Tamar that erupted on May 25, will likely change this. Media outlets sympathetic to the PYD suggest that Turkey, together with the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), its chief Iraqi Kurdish ally, are prodding the conflict.

Such claims were already being aired last week, when on May 18 PYD forces intercepted some 74 Syrian Kurds crossing illegally into Syria from Iraq, where they had allegedly undergone training by the KDP. In a Skype interview with Al-Monitor on May 21, PYD leader Saleh Muslim said that the men, all of them Syrian Kurds, were “members of a clandestine sleeper cell trained and recruited by the KDP,” which heads the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Iraq. According to Muslim, the men confessed under interrogation to being told to “await instructions from the KDP” and were eventually freed. The KDP, nonetheless, sealed the Iraqi portion of the border with Syria that it controls, a vital supply line for the Syrian Kurds and a source of income and patronage for the PYD.

In a further twist, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the KDP’s chief rival in Iraq, issued a statement carried by a pro-PKK news agency on May 25 condemning the border closure. “This was not a government [KRG] decision,” a PUK spokesman said, suggesting that the KDP had acted unilaterally.

The PUK has traditionally tilted toward the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) — the rebel group fighting for autonomy in Turkey’s mainly Kurdish southeast since 1984 and whose imprisoned leader, Abdullah Ocalan, is now in peace talks with the Turkish government — and has Iran’s backing. It is now said to be cultivating the PYD.

Left unchecked, tensions in the Kurdish region in northern Syria, which Syrian Kurds call Rojava, or Western Kurdistan, could hamper Turkey’s efforts to make peace with its own Kurds and trigger a broader intra-Kurdish conflict.

The PYD, the PKK’s franchise,rose to prominence in July 2012, when Syrian government forces withdrew from a string of Kurdish-populated towns along the border with Turkey. The PYD quickly filled the vacuum, arming itself, organizing Kurdish-language classes and draping public buildings with Kurdish flags. The PYD’s power grab set off alarm bells in Ankara amid fears that Syria’s estimated 2 million Kurds would establish an autonomous region along the lines of the semi-independent Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq.

The prevailing consensus at the time was that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had “rewarded” the PYD in order to punish Turkey for its unabashed support of the opposition rebels seeking his removal. The Kurds have remained largely neutral in Syria’s civil conflict, choosing instead to consolidate their gains in the north, which is home to a large share of the country’s oil reserves.

The PYD’s Muslim denies that his group has sided with Assad, pointing out that the Kurds had been among the Baath Party’s victims long before the uprising began. He has repeatedly called for dialogue between the PYD and Turkey. Muslim, who studied chemical engineering at Istanbul’s Technical University and speaks perfect Turkish, seems a natural interlocutor for the Turks. He is untainted by violence or armed activity against anyone. Syria’s Kurds, Muslim says, do not want independence, but so-called democratic federalism, a vaguely defined form of political and cultural autonomy.

While Muslim makes no secret of his admiration of Ocalan, whom he referred to as “our national leader,” Muslim denies that the PYD is in anyway linked to the PKK. His effort at disassociation is probably because the PKK has been labeled a terrorist organization by the United States and European governments, and thus Muslim does not want the PYD to be lumped with it.

Yet, not only have Muslim’s overtures been rebuffed by Ankara, but until recently the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan had been threatening to intervene militarily against the PYD if need be.

KRG President and KDP leader Massoud Barzani is also unhappy with the PYD’s gains. Western media reports indicate that Syrian Kurds are chafing under the PYD dominance. In a bid to weaken the PYD’s grip, in July 2012 Barzani brokered a power-sharing agreement with its far weaker rivals, but the so-called Erbil Agreement continues to exist, for now, only on paper.

Unnerved by the PYD’s seemingly unstoppable rise, Turkey is widely alleged to have egged on its Syrian rebel protégés to take up arms against PYD forces. Meanwhile, the KDP has been quietly forming Kurdish militias to rival the PYD. In November 2012, fierce clashes between the PYD and Arab opposition fighters erupted in the town of Ras al-Ain, home to a mixed population of Arabs, Kurds, Circassians and other minorities. The town was a strategic prize wedged between PYD-controlled areas and bordering Turkey’s mainly Kurdish town of Ceylanpinar. Its capture by the PYD would have established a zone of uninterrupted Kurdish influence in northeastern Syria, which is why Turkey was intent on keeping it out of PYD hands. The battle ended in a stalemate, and a cease-fire brokered in January 2013 continues to hold, albeit shakily. There were reports of fresh fighting between PYD and rebel forces near Ras al-Ain on May 27. At least four rebels were thought to have been killed in the clashes.

There is little doubt that one of the main reasons Turkey’s Erdogan decided to relaunch talks with Ocalan in October 2102 was to persuade him to use his influence not only to rein in the PKK, but the PYD as well. Turkish officials, speaking to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, confirmed that Ankara had been in contact with the PYD leader, but Muslim denies this. “I wish it were so,” Muslim told Al-Monitor, “but I haven’t met with a single Turkish official.” Either way, Erdogan no longer mentions the PYD in his salvos against Assad.

Meanwhile, Muslim asserts that Turkey has ceased meddling in Ras al-Ain, but the violence in Afrin on May 25 suggests otherwise. A PYD source on the ground claimed that rebels from the Salafist Liwa al-Tawhid brigade had started the fight and that a separate militia with ties to Barzani had joined in.

“Liwa al-Tawhid is close to the [Syrian] Muslim Brotherhood, and we know who their sponsors are –Turkey,” the PYD source, who asked not to be identified by name, told Al-Monitor by telephone. When asked about Muslim’s assurances that Turkey was no longer engaged in proxy battles, the source commented, “Muslim is constantly traveling outside the country. He doesn’t know what’s going on.”

For its part, Ankara denies any involvement in the conflict in Afrin or elsewhere in the Kurdish-dominated territories. The absence of independent observers makes either claim impossible to verify. What is clear, however, is that if Turkey is sincere about wanting democracy for Syria, it cannot exclude the country’s Kurds from the equation, least of all while it sets about making peace with the PKK.

Some Syrian Kurds argue that for as long as Assad remains in power, friendly relations with Turkey is not in their best interest. “This would turn Assad and Hezbollah against the Kurds,” said the anonymous PYD source. “Could we count on Turkey to defend us?” he asked rhetorically. “I don’t think so,” he responded.

Such fear of incurring Assad’s wrath might explain why Muslim denies persistent media reports that PKK forces withdrawing from Turkey are joining the PYD. “No PKK fighters have come to Syria,” he insisted. “Not a single one.”

By Amberin Zaman
AL Monitor

Assyrian International News Agency

Islamists Attack Turkey ‘Kissing Protest’

ANKARA — Islamists attacked a group of kissing couples who locked lips in a Turkish metro station to protest a morality campaign by the authorities in Ankara, the local press reported on Sunday.

One person was stabbed when about 20 Islamists chanting “Allah Akhbar” (God is Greatest) and some carrying knives attacked the demonstrators on Saturday, the Milliyet and Hurriyet newspapers reported.

About 200 people staged the kissing protest after officials in the Ankara municipality, which is run by Turkey’s ruling Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP), admonished a young couple for kissing in the street.

Turkey is predominantly Muslim but staunchly secular, although the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has introduced several measures opponents see as a sign of the creeping Islamisation of the country, including restrictions on alcohol.

Daily Star, Lebanon

Assyrian International News Agency

Islamists Attack Turkey ‘Kissing Protest’

ANKARA — Islamists attacked a group of kissing couples who locked lips in a Turkish metro station to protest a morality campaign by the authorities in Ankara, the local press reported on Sunday.

One person was stabbed when about 20 Islamists chanting “Allah Akhbar” (God is Greatest) and some carrying knives attacked the demonstrators on Saturday, the Milliyet and Hurriyet newspapers reported.

About 200 people staged the kissing protest after officials in the Ankara municipality, which is run by Turkey’s ruling Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP), admonished a young couple for kissing in the street.

Turkey is predominantly Muslim but staunchly secular, although the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has introduced several measures opponents see as a sign of the creeping Islamisation of the country, including restrictions on alcohol.

Daily Star, Lebanon

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Builds Wall At Syrian Border After Deadly Bombings

ANKARA (Reuters) — Turkey is constructing 1.5-mile twin walls at a border crossing with Syria to increase security at the frontier following three deadly bombings this year.

The concrete walls will be built on either side of the road leading from the Turkish side of the crossing at Cilvegozu to the Syrian border gate and will be topped with barbed wire, the Turkish Customs Ministry said in a statement.

Cilvegozu was the scene of a bombing in February which killed 14 people and this month 51 people died when twin car bombs ripped through the nearby town of Reyhanli. Advertise | AdChoices

Since July, Turkish vehicles have not been allowed to cross at the Cilvegozu gate for security reasons, but it has remained open to allow in Syrian refugees and for humanitarian aid from Turkey to be carried across.

Approved Turkish vehicles are currently allowed into the unoccupied buffer area between the Turkish and Syrian gates to unload goods before turning back.

The Bab al-Hawa gate on the Syrian side fell under the control of rebels fighting to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad last year. February’s bomb struck inside the buffer area very close to the Turkish gate.

Vehicle screening equipment and x-ray machines as well as wire fencing and extra lighting and security cameras will also be installed, the ministry said.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan will visit Reyhanli on Saturday, the first time since the bombings.

By Jonathon Burch

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey Condemns Genocide Recognition

Turkey has condemned a move by the NSW Parliament to recognise as genocide Armenian, Assyrian and Greek deaths while Turkey was under Ottoman rule. Turkey accepts that there was a loss of life on both sides but rejects the genocide charge – saying most of the deaths were the result of starvation and disease.

The Turkish Consul General in Sydney Gulseren Celik (chill-ick) says it’s not up to individual governments to pass judgement on historical events that occurred outside of Australia.

Professor Vrasidas Karalis said Turkey’s stance fails to bring justice to the millions of victims.

“Who is going to bring some justice and closure to the victims and the descendants of the victims?” he asked.

“I think Turkey at this very moment, with its very sterile rejection of every allegation, evolves into a sort of mythmaking process for the state instead of looking to the past with a fair and honest appreciation of what happened.”

Turkey and Armenia have yet to formalise plans for a joint commission looking at the historical events which led to the deaths of Turks, Armenians and others between 1915 and 1923.

http://neoskosmos.com

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey ‘Softens Opposition’ to Syria Conference

NKARA (AFP) — Turkey has softened its opposition toward a Russia-US brokered international conference on Syria following Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s trip to the United States, local media said Saturday.

“Erdogan has appeared to soften his stance about Geneva after meeting with President Obama,” commentator Asli Aydintasbas wrote in the liberal Milliyet newspaper.

Ankara agreed to an international gathering “in return for some guarantees” from Washington including an assurance that the process would not be “open-ended” and the parties would not allow months-long delaying tactics in the name of “diplomacy,” according to the columnist.

Obama and Erdogan met in Washington Thursday amid a flurry of shuttle diplomacy between world and regional powers ahead of the planned conference, which is known in Ankara as “Geneva II” — a follow-up to a 2012 accord among world powers in Geneva aimed at solving the Syrian conflict.

Ankara has so far opposed such an international gathering, arguing that it would buy Syrian President Bashar al-Assad time.

Erdogan, who spoke to Turkish reporters in Washington Friday, said he would visit Russia for further talks on a solution to the Syrian crisis.

“Our policy is not to buy time to Assad but to stop the deaths,” he was quoted as saying by the Vatan newspaper.

Erdogan’s trip to the United States followed twin car bombings in a Turkish town near the Syrian border that killed at least 51 people, in an apparent sign that the two-year conflict in Syria is dragging in neighbouring countries.

The Turkish premier had hoped to receive strong support from Washington after the deadly attacks but newspaper columnists said he was left empty handed.

“Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was welcomed in the United States with flamboyance. Military ceremony, Blair House, tête a tête dinner but beyond that one cannot talk of a concrete result,” Nazli Ilicak wrote in the pro-government Sabah daily.

“We are again on our own in the face of problems emanating from Syria. Obama has not drawn closer to a no-fly zone,” she wrote.

Turkey has called for a no-fly zone over Syria to establish safe havens to protect civilians but the United States resists the idea, saying it would be complicated to set up and difficult to enforce.

Turkey, a one-time Syria ally that has split from Assad over the conflict, is currently home to some 400,000 refugees and is increasingly frustrated by what it says the international community’s inaction over the war.

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey arrests ‘prime suspect’ over blasts

Turkish police have detained a man they believe to be one of the main perpetrators of car bombings that killed more than 50 people near the Syrian border, officials have said.

Hatay governor Celalettin Lekesiz said police had detained a man, who local media named as Mehmet Genc, shortly before midnight on Thursday in Samandag district, near the Syrian border, and that he was being treated as a prime suspect.

Turkey has accused Syria of involvement in the two bombings last weekend in the town of Reyhanli in Hatay province. Damascus has denied any role.

Huseyin Celik, deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling AK Party, said the two vehicles used in the bombings were registered to the detained man, and that he had driven one to a blast site in Reyhanli.

State-run broadcaster TRT reported on Friday that Reyhanli’s police chief had been dismissed.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said this week he did not think the attacks were the result of a weakness in the intelligence services, but that there may have been a “disconnect” between them and the police.

Multiple arrests

Lekesiz said police were still searching for two other suspected perpetrators, who along with the latest man detained had been trying to cross over into Syria from Samandag but had failed because of stepped-up security along the border.

He said the two men were believed to still be inside Turkey. A total of 16 people were in detention in relation to the bombings, Lekesiz said, four of whom were formally arrested. It was not clear what charges they faced.

Ministers have said the bombings – one of the deadliest attacks in Turkey’s modern history – were carried out by a group with ties to the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Damascus has offered to carry out a joint investigation.

Erdogan has rejected the offer and said his government would have a “road map” on the Syrian crisis after discussing the incident with Washington and other allies in the region.

The Turkish prime minister met US President Barack Obama on Thursday and the two leaders reiterated their calls for Assad to step down and for an end to the killing which the UN says has killed more than 80,000 people.

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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Turkey Joins With Exxon, Iraqi Kurds in Oil Exploration

(Reuters) — A Turkish firm is partnering with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Exxon Mobil to carry out oil exploration in northern Iraq, Turkey’s prime minister said on Tuesday, taking Turkey’s co-operation with Iraqi Kurds on energy one step further. Oil is at the heart of the fight between the Arab-led central government in Baghdad and the ethnic Kurdish-run northern enclave as they dispute control over oilfields and territory and the sharing of crude oil revenues.

Exxon, a global oil company based in Texas, was the first to sign up for exploration deals with the KRG. Others including Chevron, Total and Russia’s Gazprom Neft have followed. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said an agreement was in place for a Turkish company to become a partner with Exxon and the KRG and that details would be clearer after his US visit.

“Our oil company already has an agreement with Exxon Mobil in place … This is a step with the KRG on exploration work,” Erdogan told reporters at Ankara airport before heading to the United States for an official visit. He is due to meet US President Barack Obama on Thursday. Until now, resource-hungry Turkey has been a customer and a transportation outlet for oil exports from the Kurdish region. With this agreement, the Turks would play an active role in exploiting Iraqi Kurdistan’s rich hydrocarbon resources.

Baghdad says it alone has the authority to control exports from Iraq and that deals between oil companies and the KRG are illegal. Leaders of the autonomous Kurdish region say their right to control oil resources is enshrined in Iraq’s federal constitution, drawn up following the US-led invasion of 2003. Turkish industry sources said the likely partner is Turkish Petroleum International Company (TPIC), an arm of state-run Turkish Petroleum (TPAO). A spokesman for the company could not immediately be reached for comment.

Assyrian International News Agency

Iraq PM Condemns Turkey Bombings

Baghdad — Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Sunday condemned bombings in Turkey that killed dozens of people, saying they provide an additional incentive for international cooperation in fighting terrorism, AFP reported.

“The Iraqi government expresses its… strong condemnation of the criminal bombings in the Turkish town of Reyhanli and expresses its solidarity with the… Turkish people and the families of the innocent victims,” Maliki said in a statement on his website.

“These crimes and the expanding circle of terrorism constitute an additional incentive… to increase cooperation between all countries, especially countries in the region, and coordination between them, to cut the circle of terrorism,” he said.

Car bombs killed 46 people in Reyhanli, a town near the Syrian border, on Saturday. Ankara blamed the bombings on the Syrian regime, an accusation that Damascus has denied.

Turkey has become a rear base for rebels fighting to overthrow Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, and Damascus has already been blamed for a string of attacks on Turkish soil.

Iraq has refrained from publicly supporting either side in the conflict, though the United States has repeatedly said Iran is flying weapons to the Syrian regime via Iraqi airspace.

Relations between Baghdad and Ankara are chilly due to a variety of disagreements, including Turkey’s decision to host former Iraqi vice president Tareq al-Hashemi, who has received multiple death sentences in Iraq on charges including murder.

http://www.focus-fen.net

Assyrian International News Agency

Iraq PM Condemns Turkey Bombings

Baghdad — Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Sunday condemned bombings in Turkey that killed dozens of people, saying they provide an additional incentive for international cooperation in fighting terrorism, AFP reported.

“The Iraqi government expresses its… strong condemnation of the criminal bombings in the Turkish town of Reyhanli and expresses its solidarity with the… Turkish people and the families of the innocent victims,” Maliki said in a statement on his website.

“These crimes and the expanding circle of terrorism constitute an additional incentive… to increase cooperation between all countries, especially countries in the region, and coordination between them, to cut the circle of terrorism,” he said.

Car bombs killed 46 people in Reyhanli, a town near the Syrian border, on Saturday. Ankara blamed the bombings on the Syrian regime, an accusation that Damascus has denied.

Turkey has become a rear base for rebels fighting to overthrow Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad, and Damascus has already been blamed for a string of attacks on Turkish soil.

Iraq has refrained from publicly supporting either side in the conflict, though the United States has repeatedly said Iran is flying weapons to the Syrian regime via Iraqi airspace.

Relations between Baghdad and Ankara are chilly due to a variety of disagreements, including Turkey’s decision to host former Iraqi vice president Tareq al-Hashemi, who has received multiple death sentences in Iraq on charges including murder.

http://www.focus-fen.net

Assyrian International News Agency

Turkey blames ‘inaction’ on Syria for attacks

Turkey’s foreign minister has blamed the world’s inaction on the Syrian conflict for the “barbarian act of terrorism” that claimed dozens of lives near the border.

Ahmet Davutoglu’s comments in Berlin came a day after a twin bombing in the small town of Reyhanli, in the southern Turkish province of Hatay bordering Syria, that left at least 46 people dead and 100 others wounded.

They also followed a vigorous denial by Syria of any links to Saturday’s blasts - the deadliest incident on Turkish soil since the Syrian conflict began.

Holding Turkey indirectly responsible for the blasts, which took place just a few miles from the main border crossing into Syria, Omran al-Zoubi said: “Syria did not commit and would never commit such an act because our values would not allow that.”

Open frontier

Turkey has taken in more than 400,000 Syrian refugees, many of whom have settled in Hatay, and has thrown its full weight behind the armed opposition fighting to overthrow Assad, although it denies supplying weapons.

Fighters are able to cross back and forth across the frontier virtually unchallenged, unsettling many on the Turkish side of the border, who say more and more radical groups are joining the opposition ranks.

Davutoglu had earlier told Turkey’s TRT television that he did not believe the attacks were linked to Syrian refugees in his country, but that they had “everything to do with the Syrian regime”.

Spotlight

In-depth coverage of escalating violence across Syria

Besir Atalay, Turkey’s deputy prime minister, said authorities had arrested nine people, all Turkish citizens and including the alleged mastermind of the attacks.

The developments came as hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Antakya, about 50km from the Syrian frontier, on Sunday.

Several hundred people, mostly leftist and nationalist demonstrators, marched through the centre of the city, carrying banners and shouting anti-government slogans while onlookers cheered.

In a speech in Istanbul later broadcast on state TV, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish prime minister, said: ”We will not lose our calm heads, we will not depart common sense, and we will not fall into the trap they’re trying to push us into.”

But he added: “Whoever targets Turkey will sooner or later pay the price.”

Davutoglu, for his part, called the blasts a breach of Turkey’s “red line” and said that “it’s time for the international community to display a common stance against the regime … immediately and without delay”.

He called for an “urgent, result-oriented diplomatic initiative” to find a solution to the Syrian crisis and said that “Turkey has the right to take any kind of measure” in response to the killings.

Germany pledges support

During his talks with Davutoglu, Guido Westerwelle, German foreign minister, expressed his condolences for the victims of the “barbaric act of terrorism” and pledged Germany’s support for Turkey.

Muammer Guler, Turkey’s interior minister, said the bombings were carried out by a group with direct links to Syria’s Mukhabarat intelligence agency.

Davutoglu specifically blamed “a former Marxist organisation directly connected with the regime” of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

He also said the investigation was looking at “connections between  the Banias massacre … and the latest terror attack” in Turkey.

Rights groups say at least 62 civilians were killed this month in an assault on a Sunni district of Banias, a Mediterranean city in Syria, after at  least 50 people were killed in the nearby village of Bayda.

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AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)

Syria Denies Involvement in Turkey Car Bombs

Syria on Sunday rejected Turkey’s allegations that it was behind two car bombs that killed 46 people in Turkey and wounded dozens more.

Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi told a news conference that “Syria did not and will never do such an act because our values do not allow this. It is not anyone’s right to hurl unfounded accusations.” Zoubi’s comments were the first official Syrian response since Saturday’s bombings in the Turkish border town of Reyhanli, near Syria.

The Syrian minister alleged that Turkey is responsible “for all that happened in Syria and what happened in Turkey yesterday,” but did not explain.

He also launched one of the harshest personal attacks on Turkey’s prime minister by an Syrian official so far, demanding that Recep Tayyip Erdogan “step down as a killer and as a butcher.”

Turkey’s interior minister said authorities have detained nine people in connection with the car bomb attacks. Muammer Guler says the attacks were carried out by a group linked to Syria’s intelligence service, but did not name the group.

Deputy Prime Minister Besir Atalay said all nine people detained over the bombings are Turkish citizens.

Also on Sunday, Syrian rebels released four Filipino UN peacekeepers they abducted last week, a military spokesman in the Philippines said.

The four, seized Tuesday, were apparently unharmed, but will undergo a medical checkup and stress debriefing, said Brig. Gen. Domingo Tutaan.

The peacekeepers are part of a UN contingent that patrols a buffer zone between Syria and the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights, a plateau Israel captured from Syria in 1967.

It was the second abduction of Filipino peacekeepers since March, when 21 were held for three days by rebels fighting the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The Philippine foreign secretary has said he would recommend withdrawing Filipinos from the peacekeeping contingent in Syria, but the final decision is up to the country’s president.

Nearly 1,000 UN peacekeepers are patrolling the Golan Heights. Other major contributors are India and Austria. Croatia has recently withdrawn its contingent.

The buffer zone between Syria and the Israeli-controlled Golan had been largely quiet for four decades, but tensions have risen there since the outbreak of the revolt against Assad more than two years ago.

The uprising escalated into a civil war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced millions of Syrians. The two sides have been largely deadlocked on the battlefield.

In the latest violence in the capital, Damascus, six mortar shells struck a neighborhood causing damage and casualties, a Syrian official said on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to brief reporters.

The mortars hit the predominantly Alawite district of Mazzeh 86 during morning rush hour, he said. Sunday is the first day of the work week in Syria.

Alawites, including Assad, are followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and have dominated government under Assad family rule. Rebels and regime forces have been fighting in parts of Damascus, and have fired mortars at neighborhoods seen as pro-Assad.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, confirmed that mortars struck Mazzeh 86, but said it had no immediate reports of casualties.

http://www.ynetnews.com

Assyrian International News Agency

In Turkey, 18 Killed By Car Bombs Near Syrian Border

Turkey’s Interior Minister Muhammad Guler says 18 people were killed and 22 wounded by a double car-bomb attack in a town near the border with Syria.

Guler, quoted by the Turkish news agency Anatolia, said one explosives-packed car detonated in front of the municipal building in the town of Reyhanli.

He said another car bomb exploded near the town’s post office.

It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the attacks.

Turkey has been a crucial supporter of the Syrian opposition. Ankara has allowed its territory to be used as a logistics base and operations center for Syrian antigovernment fighters.

Based on reporting by Reuters, AP, Dogan, TRT, and NTV

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

Turkey Claims Evidence of Syrian Chemical Weapons Use

(BBC) — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has told US media he has evidence that Syria employed chemical weapons against opposition forces.

He cited the discovery of missile remains and Syrian patients showing signs of wounds from chemical weapons.

Similarly, US Secretary of State John Kerry said he now believed there was “strong evidence” of Syria using gas.

The White House previously said it had “varying degrees of confidence” that Syria had used chemical weapons.

Last month, President Barack Obama warned that such a development was a “red line” for possible intervention, but said existent intelligence did not represent sufficient proof.

Mr Kerry’s latest remarks, made on Friday during a live video discussion with Google+ users , appeared to strike a more resolute note.

“This fight is about the terrible choices that the Assad regime has made with its willingness to kill anywhere… to use gas, which we believe there is strong evidence of use of,” he said. Red line ‘crossed’

Earlier on Friday, Mr Erdogan said he believed Syria had crossed the red line “a long time ago”.

He said Turkish intelligence had determined that the Syrian government had used at least 200 chemical missiles.

“We have the remainders of these missiles, there are pictures and then there are intelligence reports,” he said.

“And there are patients who are brought to our hospitals who were wounded by these chemical weapons.”

He did not give details on the type of chemical weapons he believed Syria had used.

The Turkish leader, who is due to meet Mr Obama next week, called on the US to “assume more responsibilities and take further steps”.

Mr Erdogan rejected the idea that the weapons could have been used by rebels.

“How are they going to obtain this? And who will give this to them?” he said.

This contradicted an earlier claim by a UN expert who said there were “concrete suspicions” that rebels used nerve gas.

Carla del Ponte, who serves on the Commission of Inquiry on Syria, said testimony from victims strongly suggested that opposition fighters had used sarin, an extremely potent chemical nerve agent – although there was “no incontrovertible proof”.

However, the commission later stressed that it had “not reached conclusive findings” as to their use by any parties.

‘Limited but persuasive’

Meanwhile, British Prime Minister David Cameron has held talks in Moscow with Russian President Vladimir Putin, one of Syria’s closest allies.

Mr Cameron said the two countries had made “real progress” in discussions he described as “substantive, purposeful and frank”.

He said they had a “common interest” in stabilising Syria and preventing the growth of extremism.

Mr Cameron also welcomed a recent agreement by Russia to convene an international conference to find a political solution to the crisis.

The conference will try to persuade Mr Assad and the opposition to accept the establishment of a transitional government.

In a separate development, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said there were fears of new mass killings, amid reports that government troops were preparing to attack the rebel-held stronghold of al-Qusair.

Syrian forces allegedly dropped leaflets on the western town, warning that it would come under attack if opposition forces failed to surrender.

The US State Department also said it was concerned about the reports.

“Ordering the displacement of the civilian population under these circumstances is the latest demonstration of the regime’s ongoing brutality,” a statement said.

Last week, activists accused Syrian troops of carrying out massacres in a campaign of sectarian cleansing in the coastal region of Banias.

More than 70,000 people are believed to have died since the Syrian conflict erupted in March 2011.

Assyrian International News Agency