Zürcher Nachrichten - After a week on the streets, Turkey protesters remain defiant

EUR -
AED 4.326492
AFN 74.218903
ALL 96.440042
AMD 442.935466
ANG 2.108444
AOA 1080.297509
ARS 1613.083789
AUD 1.671434
AWG 2.120541
AZN 2.0028
BAM 1.955598
BBD 2.369745
BDT 143.785154
BGN 1.941056
BHD 0.444186
BIF 3488.825162
BMD 1.178078
BND 1.492968
BOB 8.129816
BRL 6.086895
BSD 1.176579
BTN 106.995141
BWP 15.579391
BYN 3.373937
BYR 23090.335836
BZD 2.366346
CAD 1.615205
CDF 2686.018832
CHF 0.911821
CLF 0.025862
CLP 1020.369114
CNY 8.139049
CNH 8.101763
COP 4351.279542
CRC 561.484831
CUC 1.178078
CUP 31.219077
CVE 110.248937
CZK 24.223765
DJF 209.528365
DKK 7.470778
DOP 72.315167
DZD 153.209437
EGP 56.433457
ERN 17.671175
ETB 183.094847
FJD 2.617984
FKP 0.872194
GBP 0.87351
GEL 3.151317
GGP 0.872194
GHS 12.930116
GIP 0.872194
GMD 86.59363
GNF 10322.014231
GTQ 9.027685
GYD 246.113098
HKD 9.215459
HNL 31.126333
HRK 7.533694
HTG 154.205752
HUF 379.181602
IDR 19821.757429
ILS 3.66866
IMP 0.872194
INR 107.124492
IQD 1541.434299
IRR 1512431.134815
ISK 144.715883
JEP 0.872194
JMD 183.32718
JOD 0.835233
JPY 183.693638
KES 151.912546
KGS 103.023111
KHR 4730.949297
KMF 492.437119
KPW 1060.28666
KRW 1699.472478
KWD 0.361423
KYD 0.980495
KZT 587.269362
LAK 25212.396725
LBP 105364.373544
LKR 364.042411
LRD 217.073767
LSL 18.955362
LTL 3.478559
LVL 0.712608
LYD 7.443231
MAD 10.788328
MDL 20.207828
MGA 5035.480068
MKD 61.639623
MMK 2473.612654
MNT 4203.257604
MOP 9.471582
MRU 47.106338
MUR 54.72185
MVR 18.212938
MWK 2040.280674
MXN 20.346274
MYR 4.58747
MZN 75.285126
NAD 18.955443
NGN 1586.977259
NIO 43.291304
NOK 11.264874
NPR 171.195331
NZD 1.977836
OMR 0.452966
PAB 1.176529
PEN 3.952292
PGK 5.130926
PHP 68.017524
PKR 328.831247
PLN 4.220236
PYG 7607.214526
QAR 4.288475
RON 5.09404
RSD 117.430847
RUB 90.300124
RWF 1718.415274
SAR 4.419363
SBD 9.477855
SCR 16.023298
SDG 708.615594
SEK 10.686543
SGD 1.492407
SHP 0.883864
SLE 28.859134
SLL 24703.713383
SOS 671.227844
SRD 44.288088
STD 24383.8435
STN 24.494872
SVC 10.294893
SYP 130.234786
SZL 18.949043
THB 36.567847
TJS 11.147639
TMT 4.123274
TND 3.416002
TOP 2.83653
TRY 51.661722
TTD 7.964178
TWD 37.012041
TZS 3020.690683
UAH 50.927325
UGX 4235.36495
USD 1.178078
UYU 45.65238
UZS 14369.516293
VES 473.388852
VND 30859.762613
VUV 139.378539
WST 3.195219
XAF 655.886494
XAG 0.013368
XAU 0.000228
XCD 3.183815
XCG 2.120572
XDR 0.815716
XOF 655.889277
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.91273
ZAR 18.851422
ZMK 10604.093418
ZMW 22.278605
ZWL 379.340751
  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    17.92

    +1.23%

  • RIO

    0.5100

    98.18

    +0.52%

  • BCC

    2.7350

    83.275

    +3.28%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    15.7

    +0.89%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.88

    0%

  • RELX

    0.6100

    31.11

    +1.96%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.78

    +0.21%

  • BCE

    0.1250

    26.195

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.18

    +0.46%

  • NGG

    1.4000

    92.84

    +1.51%

  • BTI

    -0.2900

    61.81

    -0.47%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    38.28

    -0.34%

  • GSK

    0.5300

    59.79

    +0.89%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    3.8550

    208.795

    +1.85%

After a week on the streets, Turkey protesters remain defiant
After a week on the streets, Turkey protesters remain defiant / Photo: KEMAL ASLAN - AFP/File

After a week on the streets, Turkey protesters remain defiant

Student protesters were back on the streets on Wednesday as they marked a week since the start of Turkey's biggest demonstrations against the rule of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan since 2013.

Text size:

The protests erupted after the March 19 arrest of Istanbul opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu as part of a graft and "terror" probe, which the main opposition CHP party slammed as a "coup".

Vast crowds have hit the streets daily, defying a protest ban in Istanbul and other big cities, with the biggest crowds gathering after dark, sparking running battles with riot police.

Ahead of a major rally on Saturday, the CHP appeared to change strategy on Wednesday, urging people to applaud, honk their horns or wave flags from their windows at 1730 GMT.

In Istanbul, crowds of students -- many of them masked -- marched through the Levent business district after a day in which many thousands had flooded the streets chanting: "Government, resign!"

And in the capital, students rallied at Ankara University campus alongside medical students from Haceteppe University and a handful of lecturers from the prestigious Middle East Technical University.

"The pressures exerted on members of the opposition have reached an alarming level," said one robed lecturer who did not give his name.

"In the same way, government pressure on universities, which has been going on for years, has become even worse with recent developments."

- 'Absolutely scandalous' -

By Tuesday afternoon, police had arrested 1,418 people, the interior ministry said.

Among them was AFP photographer Yasin Akgul, who was arrested in a pre-dawn raid on Monday and remanded in custody a day later alongside six other journalists.

The move was sharply denounced by the Paris-based news agency, which said that Akgul had been covering the protests, denouncing his jailing as "unacceptable" and demanding his immediate release.

Reporters Without Borders chief Thibaut Bruttin described the arrests as "absolutely scandalous", urging Turkey to free the journalists, including Akgul.

"These journalists were only doing their job. They have no business being brought before a court. They absolutely must be released," he told AFP.

And a French foreign ministry source said Paris was "deeply concerned by reports of repression against protesters and journalists" in Turkey, noting that Akgul "was covering the protests professionally".

The UN also voiced concern on Wednesday over the court's U-turn on the journalists' fate.

"It is a matter of concern that reportedly the initial decisions of a court in Istanbul to free the journalists were immediately reversed on the prosecutor's intervention," UN Human Rights Office spokeswoman Liz Throssell told AFP.

- 'No room left in the prisons' -

Erdogan, who has repeatedly denounced the protests as "street terror", stepped up his attacks on the opposition with a bitter tirade against the CHP and its leader Ozgur Ozel.

Most nights, the protests have turned into running battles with riot police, whose crackdown has alarmed rights groups.

But there were no such clashes on Tuesday, AFP correspondents said.

Addressing the vast crowds at Istanbul City Hall on Tuesday, Ozel warned Erdogan that the crackdown would only strengthen the protest movement.

"Our numbers won't decrease with the detentions and arrests, we will grow and grow and grow!" he vowed, saying the extent of the crackdown meant there was "no room left in Istanbul's prisons".

Although the crackdown has not reduced the numbers, most students who joined a huge street rally on Tuesday had their faces covered, an AFP correspondent said.

"We want the government to resign, we want our democratic rights, we are fighting for a freer Turkey right now," a 20-year-old student who gave his name as Mali told AFP.

"We are not terrorists, we are students and the reason we are here is to exercise our democratic rights and to defend democracy," he said.

Ozel has called the next major rally for Saturday in the Istanbul district of Maltepe on the Asian side of the city.

F.Carpenteri--NZN