Turkey: deputy PM apologises for ‘excessive violence’ against protesters

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Turkey: deputy PM apologises for ‘excessive violence’ against protesters

Bulent Arinc says original crackdown was unjust and government is sensitive to demonstrators’ concerns

  • Associated Press in Ankara
  • guardian.co.uk

Bulent Arinc

Turkey’s deputy PM, Bulent Arinc, whose comments were in contrast to those of the prime minister, who called protesters ‘looters’. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Turkey’s deputy prime minister has offered an apology in an effort to appease anti-government protesters across the country as hundreds of riot police deployed around the prime minister’s office in the capital for a fifth day.

Bulent Arinc, who is standing in for the prime minister while he is out of the country, said the crackdown was “wrong and unjust”.

It was unclear, however, whether Arinc was giving the government line. The prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is visiting Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, has undermined statements by his ministers in the past. He has previously called protesters “looters” and dismissed the protests as acts by fringe extremists.

Thousands have joined anti-government rallies across Turkey since Friday, when police launched a pre-dawn raid against a peaceful sit-in over plans to uproot trees in Istanbul’s main Taksim Square. Since then the demonstrations by mostly secular-minded Turks have spiralled into Turkey’s biggest anti-government disturbances in years, and have spread to many of the biggest cities.

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.

Protests were directed at what critics say is Erdogan’s aggressive and authoritarian style of governance. Many accuse him of forcing his conservative, religious outlook on lives in the mainly Muslim but secular nation. Erdogan rejects the accusations, says he respects all lifestyles and insists he is the servant not the master of the people.

Speaking on Tuesday, Arinc said that, “in that first [protest] action, the excessive violence exerted on people who were acting out of environmental concerns was wrong and unjust”. He added: “I apologise to those citizens.”

Arinc said the government was sensitive to the demands of the largely urban, pro-secular section of society that had not voted for Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted party.

“I would like to express this in all sincerity: everyone’s lifestyle is important to us and we are sensitive to them.”

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

Gul and Erdogan could face off next year in Turkey’s presidential election.

The Hatay province governor’s office initially said the man who died, Abdullah Comert, had been 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.

Arinc said the government was taking measures to ensure that similar “bad incidents” were not repeated as police subdued protests.

Clashes continued late into the night on Monday in Istanbul, Ankara and other cities, but Arinc said the more violent protests were subsiding.

The Turkish Human Rights Association said some 3,300 people nationwide had been detained during four days of protests, although most have since been released. At least 1,300 people were injured, the group said, although it said the true figures were difficult to come by.

On Tuesday hundreds of riot police backed by water cannon were stationed around Ankara’s main square near the prime minister’s office.

In Istanbul many people slept in the shade of trees on the grass of the park that sparked the protests, while others walked around with bags cleaning up trash. Protesters have set up an area in the centre where they are collecting food donations.

On Taksim Square protesters sat under makeshift awnings. Overturned cars and burnt-out vans stood on the edges and further in the square, spray-painted with graffiti.

via Turkey: deputy PM apologises for ‘excessive violence’ against protesters | World news | guardian.co.uk.


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