*The scene in 
#OccupyTaksim<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23OccupyTaksim&src=hash>tonight,
at dusk"
https://vimeo.com/67508651  <https://t.co/M1ADPd6HgN>
#occupygezi<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23occupygezi&src=hash>
*
*
*
*
*
*#Istanbul <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Istanbul&src=hash> a people
marching against the police pic.twitter.com/W7nm5JE4Pb<http://t.co/W7nm5JE4Pb>
#OccupyGezy <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23OccupyGezy&src=hash>*


Heavy Clashes Between The Turkish Police and the Protesters!
 http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=dc5_1370093547#avVED5wrsgs0oaui.99


*#TurquíaNoEstáSola<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Turqu%C3%ADaNoEst%C3%A1Sola&src=hash>[Video]
Concentración en
#Bélgica <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23B%C3%A9lgica&src=hash> http://
tlsur.net/11bo2VZ  <http://t.co/8ioGtRxhVO> via
@teleSURtv<https://twitter.com/teleSURtv>
*

*Estambul, Besiktas barricada con 3 camiones para impedir el paso a policía
via @ile_mor <https://twitter.com/ile_mor>
pic.twitter.com/qymYfMTmth<https://t.co/qymYfMTmth>
*
*
*
*Socialist Appeal* ‏@socialistappeal <https://twitter.com/socialistappeal>

*Mass protests in #Turkey
<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Turkey&src=hash>didn't come out of
the blue.
#MayDay <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23MayDay&src=hash> protests and #
ClassStruggle <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23ClassStruggle&src=hash> set
the stage. http://bit.ly/miUKPq  <http://t.co/kgJ1sL6wwy>*

*
*

*that was in 2011, this year Erdogan banned May Day rally from entering
Taksim Sq*

*----------------------------------------*

*
*
Turkey Special: A 4-Point Guide to the
Protests<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/2013/6/2/turkey-special-a-4-point-guide-to-the-protests.html>



 inShare

Sunday, June 2, 2013 at 8:39 | Scott
Lucas<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/author/scott-lucas>
 in EA Middle East and
Turkey<http://www.enduringamerica.com/home/category/ea-middle-east-and-turkey>

*Protesters on the Bosphorus Bridge en route to Istanbul's Taksim Square*
------------------------------

*1. WHY DID THE PROTESTS EMERGE?*

The immediate catalyst for this weekend's mass protests, fuelled by an
attempted police crackdown in Istanbul's Taksim Square on Friday, was the
Erdogan Government's plan to demolish Gezi Park, one of the last
significant green areas in the city.

Anger over the plan to build a shopping mall and condominium residences,
housed in a replica Ottoman-era military barracks, was bolstered by the
awarding of contracts to companies seen as tied to Erdogan's ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP).

Last Tuesday, a small group of people gathered in protest.

However, this is only the latest episode in a gathering
challenge<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/11980/everywhere-is-taksim-resistance-everywhere>
to
the Government over its approach to development since 2011, before general
elections, including the effective razing of Gezi Park.

The redevelopment plans, including the reconstructed barracks/shopping
mall, were approved by the High Commissioner for the Preservation of
Natural and Cultural Artifacts in March 2012. Architects and urban planners
criticised the project for reducing the presence of people in Taksim
Square, affecting political and social life.

In December 2012, the first significant change in Taksim Square came with
the eviction of the Inci Pastry House, a symbol of local business since
1944. Three months later, the adjacent Emek Theater — an independent cinema
in operation since 1924 and home to the Istanbul Film Festival — was
demolished. Kamer Construction, with close business ties to the ruling AKP
in Istanbul, was given a contract to build a ten-story shopping center and
movieplex on the grounds of the demolished building.

Last Wednesday, a parallel event raised the political temperature, as
Erdoğan inaugurated the construction of a third bridge across the Bosphorus
Strait. The project  has been challenged for uprooting between 350,000 and
2,000,000 trees. The Government has also been provocative by naming the
bridge after Yavuz Sultan Selim, noted for his massacres of Alevis inside
and outside the Ottoman Empire.

At the ceremony, Erdogan laid down a challenge: “It does not matter what
you [the protesters] do. We made a decision......We will follow through
with that decision.”

*2. WHAT ARE THE WIDER ISSUES?*

While the Government's insistence on re-development of Gezi Park is an
important social and economic catalyst, this has galvanised and links
protest on a range of issues. These include environmental concerns,
opposition to the policy on Syria, repression such as the detention of
journalists and dissidents, the ongoing Kurdish issues, opposition to the
Government's neo-liberal economic policies, and resistance to social
measures such as restrictions on alcohol.

These disparate challenges are linked by a resistance to Erdogan's attempt
to centralise power, simplistically labelled as "authoritarian". Many see
the making of a new Constitution --- likely to move Erdogan from the
Premiership to the Presidency --- as a consolidation of the AKP's dominance
rather than a document for the long-term political development of Turkey.

*3. WHO ARE THE PROTESTERS?*

While it would be mistaken to make any generalisation about the make-up of
the demonstrations, sharper observers have noted the prevalence of youth. Zihni
Özdil<http://muftah.org/why-the-gezi-park-protests-do-not-herald-a-turkish-spring-yet/#.UapSYBYWbfI.twitter>
goes
farther, portraying this as members of the "mainly upper-class, secular
‘white Turk’ social strata". Özdil summarises, "In this sense, these
demonstrations represent one of the last convulsions of the old ‘secular’
elites, who have been waging, and losing, a bitter battle against the
rising Anatolian nouveau-riche that make up Erdogan’s AKP."

Both Amberin 
Zaman<http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/06/istanbul-protests-who-are-protesters-turkey.html>
and
Özdil note the paradox that, while the protesters are denouncing the AKP's
authoritarianism, they have embraced the participation of the opposition
Republican People's Party (CHP) --- which was far from democratic when it
was in power. Özdil writes, "CHP is just as neoliberal and autocratic as
AKP and has a similarly dismal governing record when it comes to human
rights."

This leads Özdil to the caution that the protest may be narrow in its reach
to have impact:

**

*Mass labor protests, like those that preceded and directly influenced the
April 6th movement in Egypt, are largely absent from Gezi Park.
Disenfranchised, jobless youth from the slums have generally stayed away
from the demonstrations so far. Pious girls with headscarves who want more
liberties are also absent.*

In contrast, however, Agnes Czajka and Bora
Isyar<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/11980/everywhere-is-taksim-resistance-everywhere>
see
a spontaneous diversity that overcomes Özdil's analysis of protest via
long-standing groups:

**

*Defying the expectations of many, the Gezi Park protests are garnering an
unprecedented level of support. The show of solidarity between groups
previously unwilling to share a platform has been extraordinary. Protesters
have come from various age groups, cities, religious and political
convictions, and income groups. Some have reached Taksim on foot or by
chartered buses; others are sailing towards Taksim on their private yachts.

Pro-Kurdish groups are standing in solidarity with Kemalist youth
associations. Fans of rival football clubs are coordinating efforts to
support protesters in various areas of Istanbul....Tweets from Taksim tell
stories of bus drivers parking their vehicles at the entrance of streets
making them inaccessible to police water tanks; of public and private
theater companies providing food and beverages to protesters; of luxury
hotels opening their lobbies to those running away from tear gas; of taxi
drivers and bus companies carrying protesters from surrounding towns to
Istanbul and the injured to hospitals; of shop owners sharing their
wireless networks with protesters to increase organizational efficiency.
*

*In solidarity, residents of various cities in Turkey, including Ankara,
Izmir, Adana, Diyarbakir, Hatay, Mersin and Eskisehir, are gathering in
public squares to voice their dissent—the most democratic of all
rights—with the government.*

*4. SO CAN THE PROTESTS SUCCEED?*

Amberin Zaman and Zihni Özdil, knocking back the simplistic comparison of
Taksim Square with Cairo's Tahrir Square in the 2011 Revolution, note that
Erdogan --- unlike Egypt's deposed Hosni Mubarak --- has established
genuine support at the ballot box despite the charges of authoritarianism.
Zaman writes:

**

*Turkey is not on the brink of a revolution. A Turkish Spring is not afoot.
Erdogan is no dictator. He is a democratically elected leader who has been
acting in an increasingly undemocratic way.*

Özdil's view:

**

*Erdogan is no Mubarak. The AKP is a populist party that was voted into
power in free and fair elections, and has been successful in appeasing and
expanding its base.

*

*The Gezi Park protests do not herald a "Turkish Spring", at least not
yet....A mass popular uprising in Turkey will only occur when the bubble
economy bursts, which is bound to happen sooner or later. Perhaps, then,
the "Turkish Spring" will be upon us.*

The caution against a replica of Egypt 2011 is necessary. Yet both analysts
may be risking simplicity from the other side --- this weekend's events
should be seen not just as an immediate rising which will succeed or fail,
but as the start of a series of events that will change the Turkish
political landscape.

In other words, the contest --- which will take in not only social issues
like Gezi Park and the Bosphorus Bridge, but the Government's economic
approach and perceived favoritism and the broad political issues like the
Constitution and Erdogan's power --- is one for the longer-term.

A valued EA source, who supports the protesters, summarises:

**

*We need to maintain the momentum which requires lots of work. This cannot
be just a political rally --- we have to organise and direct crowds with a
solid strategy, which will not exacerbate the conflict but established the
rightful conditions of a legitimate counter-violence.

*

*We need escalation and bigger voices. Without this, we can't win.*

*
*

*-----------------------------------------------------------------------*


*Claimed footage of a police van hitting a protester*

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=BucU8XoESbk*
*


*
*


------------------------------

*Turkey: Clashes This Evening*

There are a steady stream of reports tonight of clashes between police and
protesters in Ankara and Izmir.

Police earlier used tear gas and water cannon on demonstrators blocking
roads in Ankara leading to Prime Minister Erdogan's residence.

*Palestine: New Prime Minister Appointed for West Bank*

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has appointed academic Rami
Hamdullah <http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/72987.aspx> as Prime Minister
of the West Bank.

Hamdullah replaces Salam Fayyad, who resigned in April after weeks of
tension with others in the Authority. An English professor and dean of
al-Najah University in the West Bank, Hamdullah has no prior political or
government experience.

*Libya: Call for Self-Governing Region in East*

Ahmed Zubair al-Senussi, head of the Cyrenaica Council in the east of the
country, has called for a self-governing
region<http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/02/us-libya-east-idUSBRE9510AF20130602>
.

Al-Senussi has no formal authority under transitional arrangements;
however, his council is representative of factions in the east expressing
concerns over governance of the country.

The National Assembly in Tripoli said it would form a committee to examine
the declaration by Senussi, which included promises to form a Parliament
and security force for the region.

*Turkey: Clashes in Ankara, Peaceful Demos in Istanbul*

Police in Ankara have fired tear gas at protesters, who retaliated with
stones and fireworks, blocking roads leading to Prime Minister Erdogan's
office.

Thousands of demonstrators have rallied in Istanbul's Taksim Square
throughout the day without significant incident.

Medical staff say more than 1,000 people have been injured in Istanbul and
several hundred more in Ankara since protests began Friday.

*Turkey: Summary of Erdogan's Televised Interview*

Back from a Sunday break to find crowds back in Istanbul's Taksim Square
and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan defending the Gezi Park project,
his Government and himself in a televised interview. He insists:

**

*Those who voted for us already gave us permission for this. Some people
come out & say, "Respectable Prime Minister, these [steps] are very
provocative. I don't go to the trouble of being provocative.

*

*Nobody can have the power to turn truths, realities upside down.*

Trying to divert attention from the environmental impact of razing green
space for a shopping mall, Erdogan emphasises that the re-development will
have a large cultural centre as well as residences --- "Gezi Park will be a
museum of the city."

Talking about police attacks on protesters, Erdogan says, "Yes, there was
some excessive use of tear gas," but continues, "What if they [the police]
didn't? We saw what happened with protesters burning police cars."

The Prime Minister asks, "Why are you doing this, did we take your
democratic and voting rights away?", and then attacks the villain: "There
is this trouble called Twitter now. Social media, in my opinion, is the
biggest trouble for all societies."

Erdogan insists the events "have nothing to do with trees". Instead, "this
is an ideological fight against" him, as municipal elections approach. He
repeats that he has a majority of the electorate and says, "The people
supporting my party are calling and asking are we going to stay silent?"

He repeats, "You can't say you can meet wherever you want. This bothers the
society and disrespects the rest of society."

As for social issues in the protests, Erdogan says of restrictions on
alcohol, "I do all of this because I love all of my citizens, I want them
to get rid of their bad habits, I want all of their support."

The Prime Minister insists that anyone who drinks alcohol is an alcoholic.

*Turkey: Claimed Footage of Police Brutality*

Police kicking a protester in Ankara:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=-L9BNXT6n2I


*Turkey: During and After the Protests*

A guitarist in front of riot police (photo: Kemal Aslan):

<https://twitter.com/SultanAlQassemi/status/341071961302118400/photo/1>

Istanbul's Taksim Square this morning:

<https://twitter.com/LaurenBohn/status/341071695408410624/photo/1>

*Turkey Summary: Protests on Saturday as Police Pull Back*

Following the spark of police violence on Friday, thousands of protesters
established themselves not only in Taksim Square --- the focal point of
demonstrations --- but also in other areas of Istanbul and in other Turkish
cities on Saturday.

The protests began last Tuesday with a sit-in against the re-development of
Istanbul's Gezi Park into a shopping mall, but --- amid the police use of
tear gas and water cannon, with 79 injuries and almost 1000 arrests ---
have expanded into a challenge to the rule of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.

Riot police pulled back on Saturday from Taksim Square, but there were
clashes in other areas of the city and in the capital Ankara.

Confrontation in the Besiktas area of Istanbul last night:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=WaDT1KPEuB8


In a speech on Saturday, Erdogan was defiant, declaring that "illegal
organisations [were] provoking naive protesters" and there can be no "safe
haven" for demonstrations: "There are games being played....Nobody has the
right to protest against the law and democracy."


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

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