Istanbul's central area of Taksim is currently the scene of a fledging 'occupy movement' as people react to this morning's 5am teargassing of protestors opposed to unchecked gentrification in the historic city.
These are some cursory notes on whats been unfolding in Istanbul's central square Taksim and the small green area within in - Gezi Park, as of Friday 31 May there is still little English language coverage, the best place to look is #occupygezi or in Turkish #direngeziparkı which is trending worldwide.
NOW: Photos of Taksim Gezi Park destruction&protest twitter.com/140journos/sta…twitter.com/140journos/sta…twitter.com/140journos/sta… via @140journos
— Emre KIZILKAYA (@ekizilkaya) May 28, 2013
Searching for English language news or analysis of whats currently taking place in central Istanbul is not particularly fruitful, most likely the first thing you will come across is this Tweet from the Reuters news agency:
Photo: Turkish police use tear gas against an environmental protester in Taksim Square, Istanbul. twitter.com/ReutersWorld/s…
— Reuters World (@ReutersWorld) May 28, 2013
Along with a lot of information in Turkish there are quite a few Tweets pointing at the environmental nature of the protest with tree-saving and maintaing green space in an over urbanised city as the key issues. This is only the tip of the iceberg.
The recent wave of violence released by Turkish police under the rule of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's AKP (Justice and Development Party) government including this morning's tear gassing of protestors is in fact a growing trend which many are worried as seeing Turkey slipping further and further into authoritarian rule. Since the annual May 1st demonstrations violence used against protestors has intensified in Istanbul as people have taken to the streets to decry the worrying trends they see developing in their country. This is reflected around the country with attacks on university students in Ankara coupled with a rapidly destabilising situation in the South East as the Turkish border areas are dragged into the Syrian conflict.
Back in Istanbul years of rapid neo-liberal gentrification under the guise of urban improvement has seen swathes of the city transformed. Most recently the go ahead was given for the third Istanbul bridge which is due to see the city transform into an enormous monster spreading up towards the black sea. Many commentators see this as the death knell for Istanbul. In the city centre the central working class neighbourhood of Tarlabasi is currently being decimated while projects such as Galataport and the redevelopment of the Kadikoy train station see historical parts of the city flattened and redevelopment as global investment opporutinites leading to soaring prices and the replacing of large parts of the city with shopping malls and luxury apartments.
Curious? #Taksim protest? See picture of park within cement jungle- AKP wants to turn into shopping mall #Istanbul twitter.com/Istanbultelavi…
— Louis Fishman (@Istanbultelaviv) May 30, 2013
In Taksim square, Gezi park (hardly a park by European standards but more a huge traffic island made of of concrete with several hundred trees sitting in its midst) sees itself as the latest victim of a government which deploys heritage as an argument for redevelopment as it drags from the dust the idea of an Ottoman Army Barracks which suddenly must be developed as a shopping mall, replacing one of the last remaining open spaces a city which is already struggling to breathe from congestion, traffic and over development. Scene of protests for the last few days this morning saw police attempt to clear protestors with swathes of tear gas, hospitalising some with an attack which started at 5am while many were sleeping in a makeshift camp. Protestors belongings and tents were burned and newly planted trees uprooted. At 8am this seemed to cease as opposition politicians seeking to make political capital declared opposition to the ongoing destruction and arrived among the bulldozers.
Istanbul pro Kurdish MP SIRRI SÜREYYA ÖNDER battles with JCB's ripping up trees in Taksim Square! #TwitterKurdstwitpic.com/cttinh
— Speak Out 4 Rojava! (@Hevallo) May 28, 2013
Tell your fans, there is a huge after party at #geziparki in Taksim. @rihanna
— ♕ Pireti Pinkopoulou (@piretiponk) May 30, 2013
Meanwhile a gathering has been called Thursday night in Taksim square at 19:00.
This is a super rushed account of what's happening and doesn't take into account many of the factors which play into this complex story, hopefully by tomorrow some more English language accounts will be coming out of the city with better analysis.
As of Friday 31 May I am trying to update the story with links below.
Title image credit @ekizilkaya.
Comments
Not sure about the source,
Not sure about the source, seems to be an Englush-language Turkish news site, but this: http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=110179
Earlier, 22 april:
Earlier, 22 april: http://www.bianet.org/english/english/146055-taksim-gezi-park-emerges-as-city-s-new-alternative-hub
For the last few hours this
For the last few hours this has been trending worldwide at #direngeziparkı.
The picture today seems much
The picture today seems much the same, campers awoken by teargas at 5am before repeated eviction attempts with numbers swelling this morning, keep an eye on #direngeziparkı and #occupygezi.
CNN has a report from yesterday: http://edition.cnn.com/2013/05/30/world/meast/istanbul-protests/index.html
Istanbul based paper on over construction making the city uninhabitable http://www.todayszaman.com/news-316968-istanbul-becoming-uninhabitable-with-mega-construction-projects.html#.UaglgUia84s.facebook
Reuters is now reporting this
Reuters is now reporting this story with much more background and as a protest angled at the AKP government: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/05/31/uk-turkey-protests-idUKBRE94U0JA20130531
Twitter reports coming in as of Friday afternoon that Turkish Police have killed a man in the square after he was hit with a tear gas canister and suffered from a heart attack.
Interestingly nothing I have seen online so far seems to suggest that anyone is particularly fighting back or resisting the police in any way, certainly not organised.
Rabble has an in-depth report
Rabble has an in-depth report up here:
http://occupygezipics.tumblr.
http://occupygezipics.tumblr.com/
A statement (in English)
A statement (in English) apparently from protesters: https://twitter.com/KeremBrulee/status/340465148621885440/photo/1
Good context in the Guardian
Good context in the Guardian now: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/may/31/istanbul-park-protests-turkish-spring?CMP=twt_gu
Solidarity encampments have
Solidarity encampments have now gone up at least two other major cities (Ankara and Izmir). Trying to get English language reports backs for libcom tomorrow...
There is conflict in Ankara
There is conflict in Ankara as well. About 3.000 protester pushing the barricades.
I'm trying to follow
I'm trying to follow twitter...the Besiktas football ultra group Çarşı came to protect those resisting at Taksim Park, seizing a police TOMA vehicle and police radios in the process (here's them arriving)
Galatasary and Fenerbache fans also uniting and helping out.
Apparently 400 people were detained and ultrAslan (Galatasary fans) saved them. The latter were/are? currently trapped in some sort of tunnel (photographs and here they are earlier on in the day]). Solidarity from Manual Fernandes and a Fen. player whose name I've forgotten.
edit: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BLoo4TjCAAAEGD1.jpg:large
This is apparently a
This is apparently a government building on fire (I assume in Istanbul?). There's also some great photos doing the rounds of thousands of people streaming across one of the (non pedestrian) Bosphorus bridges. Seems to be escalating.
It does seem to be escalating
It does seem to be escalating and spreading quite a lot. I have seen reports of demonstrations in Ankara, Izmir, Zonguldak, Konya, and Izmit. There has been a court decision to delay the building work in Istanbul, but it doesn't seem to have any effect in quieting things down.
Devrim
And Eskisehir, Antalya,
And Eskisehir, Antalya, Kutahya, Kayseri, Afyonkarahisar, Manisa, Nazilli, and Marmaris.
http://m.radikal.com.tr/iphone/NewsDetail.aspx?ArticleID=160391&CategoryIDs=1
Devrim
...and Bodrum... Devrim
...and Bodrum...
Devrim
Thousands crossing the
Thousands crossing the Bosphorus
Empty tear gas canisters
Resistance continues. Sadly
Resistance continues. Sadly it's not revolutionary enough. But it's something.
http://occupygezipics.tumblr.com/
Apparently those bridge
Apparently those bridge photos are from a marathon in 2010 unfortunately
ah ok, will edit (though no
ah ok, will edit (though no results on tineye)
Those pictures are on a few
Those pictures are on a few sites though, and the people don't exactly look dressed for a marathon.
Picture timeline Photo
Picture timeline
Photo gallery: Turkish police teargas anti-govt protesters
All of my friends i Turkey
All of my friends i Turkey reported that they have never seen something like that. Popular support to the demos are unbounded. The clashes have continued all day in major towns yesterday and growing.
mikail firtinaci wrote: All
mikail firtinaci
could you please keep us updated with developments? And encourage other people in Turkey to post here letting us know?
Police have retreated from
Police have retreated from the Taksim square. This is a huge moral victory. Since 1980 military coup police have never retreated.
some pictures of today and
some pictures of today and yesterday:
http://occupygezipics.tumblr.com/
Istanbul stray dogs fighting
Istanbul stray dogs fighting against the police in the spirit of their Athenian comrades:
women were always at the
women were always at the forefront:
According to some rumors
According to some rumors facebook and twitter is blocked. The turkish media is completely silent. The clashes are still going on in Ankara and other major and minor towns.
EDIT: It is almost certain that twitter and facebook is blocked.
Livestream with english
Livestream with english commentary:
http://m.ustream.tv/channel/pinarogun?utm_campaign=t.co&utm_source=14571749&utm_medium=social
Livestream from the Taksim square:
http://www.halkhaber.tv/
earlier today a spontaneous
earlier today a spontaneous gathering of people marched from the Ataturk bridge (connecting asian and european sides of istanbul)
https://twitter.com/refikabirgul/status/340776196960829440/photo/1
A picture from Ankara where clashes are still going on
https://twitter.com/EliifAntaal/status/340787173680902144/photo/1
A tired demonstrator resting after the night long battle and the victory in Istanbul:
https://twitter.com/irfanaktan/status/340839581354180608/photo/1/large
The BBC are saying
The BBC are saying this
Can someone clarify how much/little this is reflective of the popular anger, because now the tree fib has been debunked by the spread of the demonstrations, this seems to be a developing narrative in the regular press...
Quote: Can someone clarify
I think this is partially correct. It is right that anti-AKP feelings is a huge factor uniting the protestors. However the demos are not simply about "anti-islamism". It is not a coincidence that everything started with this park issue. Ruling parties grand infrastructure and construction policies changed the economic and social face of turkey. You can see major construction and renovation projects in every part of the country. These includes huge investments on new suburbs, highways, energy stations etc. And this process has created AKP's new wealthy elite. In almost 11 years since the AKP came to power, a new conservative fraction inside the capitalist class has dramatically emerged and enlarged. The most visible effect of this was on the cities. Older buildings, even whole districts in city centers where poorer people live have been gentrified. And the hatred towards AKP exploded in this situation.
This reclaiming of the city center was a huge issue for in recent years since every 1st of May leftists and workers were trying to demonstrate on the Taksim square (a central historical and cultural square in Istanbul). However, Taksim square was also significant for AKP since it was here that they implemented their most symbolic and radical construction policies by raising whole buildings, closing the parts of the square to public etc. And every year there were significant clashes on the 1st of Mays -including this year.
However, this spontaneous explosion was totally unexpected. Conventional intellectualist mentality in Turkey assumes that average turkish worker and youth is totally nihilistic, unresponsive to politics at best if not conservative. But AKP has changed the the relations between the state and workers dramatically in its decade long rule. It stripped the state all its remaining "neutral" image. More importantly it crushed heavily all the intermediary political groups (like social democrat-Kemalists) and unions rejecting any negotiation. In fact AKP paradoxically constructed a huge authoritarian system of police oppression and censure trusting its popular electoral successes. This erosion of "civil society" intermediary groups created a perfect basis for such a spontaneous and unexpected rising.
Some frıends told that there
Some frıends told that there are at least two demonstrators killed. But since there is a complete media black out no news is reported on that.
This is confirmed -
This is confirmed - http://www.liveleak.com/c/Turkey_Protests_2013 has video evidence of the deaths of two demonstrators - one a man ran over by an armoured police vehicle, and two a man killed by a water cannon at extremely close range.
I really don't advise watching the videos unless you want to upset yourself, but it is important to keep a record of these things. Also there is evidence of many acts of police brutality such as beatings of demonstrators they have caught, and people being injured by being shot in the head by tear gas canisters.
A somehwat sceptical view,
A somehwat sceptical view, calling the thing an "upper class revolt": http://muftah.org/why-the-gezi-park-protests-do-not-herald-a-turkish-spring-yet/
I am not convinced, but I wonder what people, especially those with more knowledge of Turkish context and background think.
rooieravotr wrote: A somehwat
rooieravotr
Without knowing much about Turkey it is very rare for "upper class revolts" to take the form of rioting.
It is completely wrong to
It is completely wrong to call this a middle class "white turk" revolt.
I could have only seen the first day of the protests -before the police attack-. There were only a few dozen people and most of them were students, professionals and middle class people then. The political spectrum was leftist. Even though it was obvious from the scene that there was a police crackdown to be expected I assumed naively that would be the end of it. The following resistance was probably unexpected for everyone including both the government and and the leftists. Especially on Friday and Saturday workers from the slums surrounding Istanbul poured into the center. That is indisputable. What is more interesting is that those workers from many political and ethnic backgrounds have fought together. Kemalist (Turks) fought together with the Kurdish people. Nationalist grey wolfes were trowing stones to the police together with the radical leftists.
In one sense this is a cross class revolt. Traditionally conservative small shop owners were helping the demonstrators. Professionals and football fans were fighting together. There were famous artists, singers, comedians supporting and even joining in but the majority on the front line was probably workers, unemployed, housewives and high school students.
In this 45 minute interview
In this 45 minute interview Sevinc who recently migrated from Turkey to Ireland provides context on the Gezi park struggle and the police repression from recent regional and left politics. Touches on the Turkish left & anarchist movement, LGBT & Kurdish struggles, the role of the Ultras, army & Police
Turkish anarchist on background to Gezi Park struggle in Istanbul - explanation for the left by Workers Solidarity on Mixcloud
http://www.wsm.ie/c/turkish-anarchist-gezi-istanbul-explanation
an amazing video from tonight
an amazing video from tonight showing a spontaneous moment of mass uprising:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKv601khylM&feature=youtu.be
Live coverage from the square:
http://rt.com/on-air/turkey-protest-istanbul-park/
Police are now using a
Police are now using a stronger chemical projectiles similar to those that the greek police have started using, stronger than tear or pepper gas.
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=ec7_1370131192
(i believe 'Agent Orange' as mentioned on the vid must be the wrong name name for it, thought that stuff is super illegal for causing birth defects when used by the US in the Vietnam war.)
Agent Orange wouldn't make
Agent Orange wouldn't make much sense, it's a defoliant, not a crowd control weapon, used in Vietnam to clear forests to increase American air force's tactical edge (with horrific consequences and a total disregard for human life, of course). Also really toxic from what I understand, seems like a hell of a jump from tear gas to a highly poisonous chemical weapon.
Not saying they couldn't be using something much stronger than usual but Agent Orange would be a very strange choice for a police force trying to quell urban unrest.
Quote: Not saying they
It is probably a false rumor. However it is certain that police is using outdated tear gas canisters.
Here is an amazing scene where people are beating up the police and appropriating their shields:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iKVj7rgbTQ
Does anyone know how this is
Does anyone know how this is playing out in the Kurdish parts of the country or within Kurdish groups and parties?
Quote: Does anyone know how
There were definitely Kurds fighting on the streets. In some streets people shouting Kurdish nationalist slogans fought together with people carrying the Turkish flags. There were demos in Kurdish or minority Kurdish towns (Van, Mersin, Antakya, etc), not to mention the fact that Istanbul is also the biggest Kurdish population town in Turkey...
However, in my opinion BDP (the Kurdish national party) have totally collapsed in the face of the revolt. Some leaders of the party rejected to be identified with the revolt, however one MP (Sirri Sureyya Onder) was in the Square from the beginning of the events. So they missed their chance to join officially while the Kurdish masses were revolting on the streets. And at the same time they could not withdraw the Kurdish people from the streets.
As a matter of fact this political impotence is not limited to Kurdish nationalism. Turkish nationalist parties have also been caught by surprise. MHP (the fascist turkish party) could neither support nor criticize the movement or the government. However, my friends told that they saw many people wearing three crescent (a symbol of turkish fascism) scarfs on the streets. Among the mainstream bourgeois parties only CHP (the Kemalist party) acted cleverly in my opinion. They neither claimed the movement for themselves nor hesitated to join it. The leader of the CHP was in Taksim yesterday.
madashell wrote: Agent Orange
madashell
That was my understanding, i seem to remember reading that in Greece the different chemical was nicknamed 'Agent Orange' by protesters because the smoke is slightly orange.
some interesting points in
some interesting points in http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article28813 (I think, the author is from the IS tradition), there was a number of strikes planned for early june
more stuff about strikes on http://en.uidder.org/ (I think they are former Maoists who maintain cordial relations with AWL, Lutte Ouvriere and some Iranian groups)
A friend had both arms broken
A friend had both arms broken by police.
Jesus Christ. Full
Jesus Christ. Full solidarity.
This comes via the French
This comes via the French Anarchist Federation (FA-IFA) from Revolutionary Anarchist Action in Turkey:
Le 02 juin 2013 16:57, Devrimci Anarşist Faaliyet DAF a écrit:
The clashes began yesterday morning with the intensity no less than the first day of resistance. Police blocked the ways entering Taksim at first. Although the police attacks were more harsh than the day before, nearly one million people fought, moving the barricades forward kicked the police out. Then all the people entered Taksim and Gezi Park. Police had to escape and their cars that could not escape were burned.
Yesterday, the clashes spread all over the country. In many other cities, police attacked protesters with gas bombs, pressured toxic water and plastic bullets. Protesters cleared protected free zones behind barricades.
Yesterday we as Revolutionary Anarchist Action were fighting at the front lines and during the first moments of entrance into the square we wrote a public declaration. We are sharing it below:
This is just the beginning, the struggle is going on.
Revolt is out of time and space. For about 40 hours from Istiklal to Harbiye, from Tarlabasi to Besiktas the freedom of a rebellion is being felt. We come in to Taksim Square from Istiklal, after forty hours of clashes. Law enforcement officers run away with all their vehicles. Forty hours, forty years, the square has been a world for us.
This was the freedom of rebellion, maybe the most frightening slogan was that, this is just the beginning the struggle is going on.
Yes, our struggle is going on till we grow our free world, which we carry in our hearts.
Came back from the
Came back from the demonstration in Ankara a few hours ago. I'm still very tired and full of tear gas so this will be quite brief. The movement is very heterogenous, with a previously apolitical majority. Very widespread, lots of people are very excited. In Istanbul, over a milion demonstrators overwhelmed the police and took over Taksim square. In Ankara violent clashes have been occuring over the demonstrators intent to occupy Kizilay square and march on the parliament. Today, after hours of clashes and tons of tear gas, the police only managed to disperse the demonstration with the aid of soldiers. The number of total people demonstrating in and around Kizilay is reported to be over 100,000. A protestor was shot with a real gun on the head in Ankara yesterday,and is in hospital right now, expected to die
Calls for a general strike
Calls for a general strike are spreading on facebook, twitter and all.
Beşiktaş Çarşı football
Beşiktaş Çarşı football supporters apparently hunting a police tank with a bulldozer
[youtube]fa0TtFkkvUs[/youtube]
Leo wrote: Calls for a
Leo
I was waiting for that. What day is being proposed? All out indefinite or single day?
wojtek wrote: Beşiktaş Çarşı
wojtek
It's an excavator not a bulldozer.
Jenre wrote: Those pictures
Jenre
yeah, with these photos of the bridge up close you can definitely tell they are from the protests. Look at the clenched fists and clubs! Not to mention the flags and banners. They are amazing photos…
Quote: I was waiting for
Well, today was being proposed initially but now there seems to be an increasing focus on tomorrow, and DISK, KESK and other leftist unions are having an extraordinary meeting where they are discussing the possibility of having a general strike. University teachers have gone on strike in Istanbul and Ankara, and also in Ankara several hospitals have gone out basically, declaring that they will only deal with emergencies and the demonstrators. So far the teachers are saying they will be on strike until the 5th, which is going to be when the public sector workers were already scheduled to have a strike. I personally believe that only after the 5th it can actually begin, if the strikers refuse to go back to work.
Here's a banner inviting workers to a general strike:
#invitationtothegeneralstrike If not today, then when? Turn off the switches! Down with the anti-worker government! Both the workplaces and the streets are ours!
Paul Mason at the BBC has
Paul Mason at the BBC has written about the demonstrations and points out that it 'is certainly already something more than the Turkish version of Occupy.'
Meanwhile an analyst at The Telegraph newspaper is describing how the demonstrations are affecting financial markets, below is a snippet.
The Telegraph
another interesting element
another interesting element are the massive solidarity demonstrations of Turkish and Kurdish communities all around the world, in Germany it is my perception that the AABF, a federation representing around 35-50% of the 500.000-600.000 Alevis in Germany is a driving force in organising the protests, the AABF is both a religious body and a left-leaning socio-political organization
you can find a timeline of
you can find a timeline of some of the events in multiple languages on linksunten.indymedia.org. the timeline reaches from saturday to yesterday night. it will be continued.
https://linksunten.indymedia.org/de/node/87733
https://linksunten.indymedia.org/de/node/87793
https://linksunten.indymedia.org/de/node/878
edit: ticker for the first half today
https://linksunten.indymedia.org/de/node/87901
edit2: nearly real time:
http://turkishspring.nadir.org/
More news on the strike:
More news on the strike: KESK, the leftist public workers union, has declared that it will merge its one-day warning strike with the demonstrations, and the KESK general strike will take place on the 4th and the 5th, bringing a total of 240,000 public workers on a strike. Meanwhile, DISK, the leftist private sector union which said it can mobilize up to 150,000 workers, has announced that it will be organizing warning demonstrations, with the slogan: "we will stop life if the government doesn't stop attacking demonstrations", reading leaflets in workplaces tomorrow and starting to take action on the 5th. KESK apparently called for a general strike for all unions on the 5th and the 6th, and I've read that DISK, TMMOB (engineers and archithects union) and the TTB (doctors union) are warm on the idea. Calls are made on Turk-Is, the mainstream public workers union, to join in as well although I don't think anyone aside from the opposition unions within Turk-Is (the Syndical Power Unity Platform) will even participate in the demonstrations.
My personal opinion: KESK's limited general strike won't have a large effect, unless the 240,000 striking remain on strike after the 5th or the 6th, quite possibly against the wishes of KESK leaders themselves. The demonstrators probably will urge them to do so, which they well might - and if they do, other workers there might follow.
Additional news: more police brutality in Ankara, the Rector's Office of the Aegean University in Izmir has been occupied, and the demonstrators in Taksim gave the names of the Kurdish victims of the massacre in Roboski (Uludere) and the Turkish and Arab victims of Reyhanli to the trees - a meaningful demonstration of internationalism.
Quote: While masses of
http://www.dailydot.com/news/cnn-turk-istanbul-riots-penguin-doc-social-media/
http://ww4report.com/node/122
http://ww4report.com/node/12296
any news of similar protests
any news of similar protests in neighboring countries? do you think that might happen?
This is going crazy on
This is going crazy on facebook. Probably twitter too.
From what I have heard there has been widespread censorship and people are circulating images, videos, callouts via social media and instant messaging. In an extension of the solidarity you can see in a lot of the videos and images there are also contact details for doctors and medical help being widely circulated.
Solidarity with all comrades and protesters.
I've tried to give as much info as possible, but Turkish is difficult enough to translate as it is and I don't actually speak it. I'll fix any mistakes if you let me know.
A summary with lots of footage from Istanbul over the last few days. It shows a lot of what others have said, the nervous energy of first time protesters, the banging of pots, throwing tear gas back at cops. Some of the water cannons appear to be shooting clear water others green/yellow liquid, not sure if this is just dirty water or if it has tear gas in it.
http://vimeo.com/67594417
Translation of a medical student telling people what to do at a makeshift hospital in a mosque.
Police casually hosing people. I think this is a few days old.
Antakya, not sure if those are fireworks or volleys of tear gas grenades in the background.
Wish someone hadn't drawn all over this image
Sorry for the translations, I don't speak Turkish.
Marginal
Why is the media silent.
Drunk
terrorist
heretic
fascist.
Not sure of the translation but I think it means
They who dare to attack women cannot be prime minister.
Injured people in Beşiktaş area of Istanbul.
https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/419143_391382350980179_1311706372_n.jpg
Barricades in same area with truckers showing solidarity
The university students have set up medical support in the buildings but the whole area is being very heavily gassed. Viedo of uni entrance on Sunday
More from Besiktas, like in all the other videos the protesters aren't damaging cars or property (aside from building barricades) It is surreal to see them firing water cannons at a protesters who are retreating through a traffic jam.
Bursa 01:30 Sunday night I think
Central Ankara
People from Ankara and keçiören Marching through Ankara.
Antalya
Police
Police shooting teargas canister into protester's chest after he ignores tear gas grenades falling around him. (might have been something else like a beanbag round, tear gas grenades do more damage I think.)
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Protests in Izmir
I cannot really work out what this means but the photo is from Tunali Caddesi one of the main streets of Ankara.
"Melih says this challenge. Tunali is like a beautiful experiment now. Let us Build a barrier from the stones for any 'dokunanlara' (I have no idea what that means.)
The Irish SWP is circulating
The Irish SWP is circulating a statement on facebook from their Turkish comrades that states that the Kamalists came out after the police were forced away from the park. Anyone know if that's accurate?
Link? What is a Kamalist? In
Link? What is a Kamalist? In Turkey Ataturk is widely popular and pretty much every party claims to be maintaining his legacy as far as I remember. Criticising Ataturk is on a par with saying "fuck the troops" in the US.
Workers in several
Workers in several working-class neighborhoods in Istanbul have taken to the streets, shouting general strike, general resistance.
jef costello wrote: Link?
jef costello
I'm assuming he means Kemalist ie Attaturk worshipper.
I was only in Turkey for a week & only met certain types of people (those in tourist industry/areas or young/educated, English-speaker, etc) but the tension between the conservative, ultra-religious rhetoric of Erdogan's party & the largely secular (or nominally/culturally 'Muslim') urban middle class was palpable. Erdogan seems deliberately provocative with his statements about alcohol, women, etc, almost an Ahmadinejad-esque populist, aiming at rural working classes.
Are there any obvious economic imperatives here? I mean, the issue seems to have gone way beyond that of the park & the mall development. Do the urban youth object to rampant developmentalism or do they see it as a necessary imperative to stimulate economic growth?
What role have the military played here? Don't they consider themselves defenders of the Turkish constitution & secularism? I see they've been supporting the police in public order in a couple of instances, what are the odds of them attempting a Tahrir-style manoeuvre if this continues to grow?
The opposition within
The opposition within Turk-Is, the main public sector trade-union in Turkey, have declared that they will be going to work late, slowing work, demonstrating before going to work or afterwars, reading leaflets or striking.
I don't normally link to SWP
I don't normally link to SWP posts but under the circumstances.
Latest statement from the Turkish Revolutionary Socialist Workers Party
You should not, the Turkish
You should not, the Turkish SWP is, in essence, a pro-government organization.
This just in: DISK and TMMOB (leftist public workers union and the engineers and architects union) will also be going on strike tomorow.
Quote: Avukatlar Çağlayan
According to this blog 261 people have been arrested so far in Istanbul.
David: thanks for the link, I can see why you didn't post it.
Leo: I hope you are all well in Ankara.
This article, from former UK
This article, from former UK ambassador & self-styled 'dissident' Craig Murray, on the latent Kemalist-fascism behind the movement, is doing the rounds. Seems quite contentious IMO, but it's the first attempt in English to analyse the strengths & weaknesses of the movt and its relationship with nationalism: http://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2013/06/talking-turkey/
Caiman del Barrio wrote: This
Caiman del Barrio
That is moronic. Any close reading will reveal that it's based on no real information as to the actual composition of the movement over the last days, but a somewhat/very simplistic version of recent history which does the very thing the article starts by denouncing - i.e. implicitly divides sides up into black hats and white hats. I imagine the only reason it's "doing the rounds" is that it might feed into some lame Counterpunchy-style cold war politics which isn't happy until it can reduce any political unrest in the region into a sinister US/Zionist plot. None of the available evidence from the outside, or the accounts on here from people present in the events, points to a Grey Wolves/CHP/MHP/Deep State plot.
edit: which is not to say, of course, that the CHP/MHP/Army etc aren't currently busy trying to figure out how best to take advantage of the situation, but then so, naturally, are all the other political tendencies (other than AKP loyalists).
Re: military and police. My
Re: military and police.
My understanding is that there's traditionally a distrust and a tension there. But I've also heard that the military has been called into certain protest hot-spots to help the cops quell the situation (could also be inflated Twitter rumors--there's a fuck ton of that in Turkey). That being said, Turkish police are incredibly militarized generally and as fucked up as things have gotten, the pigs could still get a lot more aggressive if they wanted to. I mean, it would involve mass causalities, but there's a history of that in Turkey unfortunately.
jef costello
I tried to go into that a little bit here, Jef.
Chilli Sauce wrote: But I've
Chilli Sauce
I've heard directly from a comrade in Ankara that this has been the case there. Seems it was mainly limited to clearing the main square and I haven't heard of it happening elsewhere. I have seen photos of soldiers handing out gas masks to protesters though.
Police arrest Twitter users,
Police arrest Twitter users, from the BBC:
state-run Anatolia news agency reported that police had arrested 25 people for tweeting "misinformation".
An official from the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), Ali Engin, told Anatolia they were being held for "calling on people to protest".
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday that Twitter was a "menace" being used to spread "lies".
Speaking of the "twitter
Speaking of the "twitter menace"... Rabble.ie still has two reporters in Istanbul tweeting nightly from Taksim on @wearerabble for anybody who doesn't have enough Turkish to follow most of #occupygezi.
Also the latest longer piece
Also the latest longer piece by the Rabble journos:
(tear gas makes us high)
Fortress Taksim
more stuff:
more stuff: http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?rubrique9 (some interesting articles, mostly from a left-socialist or Mandelite background)
http://turkishspring.nadir.org/index_eng.html (updated every few minutes)
Chilli Sauce wrote: jef
Chilli Sauce
Thanks, I was mostly interested in the context of the statement David referred to because it's a fairly meaningless description in Turkey.
An article entitled 'Doctors,
An article entitled 'Doctors, Workers and Teachers Stop Work' is reporting there being 850,000 strikers today: http://m.radikal.com.tr/iphone/NewsDetail.aspx?ArticleID=160879&CategoryIDs=1
Devrim
http://www.jadaliyya.com/page
http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/12009/occupy-gezi_the-limits-of-turkey’s-neoliberal-succ
http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/12008/on-the-turkish-model_neoliberal-democracy-with-tea
http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/11978/the-right-to-the-city-movement-and-the-turkish-sum
It definitely happened, but
It definitely happened, but I'm struggling to find any in-depth sources that covered it in English.
several messages about strike
several messages about strike rallies, etc. here: http://turkishspring.nadir.org/index_eng.html ... most Turkish leftwing orgs, unions, etc. have better things to do at the moment than updating or creating english-language pages
iexist wrote: Did the strike
iexist
Chilli Sauce
This is the piece I linked to yesterday (I was on my phone, and it is only a phone link above):http://www.radikal.com.tr/turkiye/doktorlar_isciler_ogretmenler_is_birakti-1136358
The article is in Turkish, but just to sumarise the numbers, it says 850,000 in total.
DİSK: health, ports, electric-gas sector
KESK: education, health, municipal, and population and tax office workers 250,000
TTB Doctors 90,000
TMMB Engineers and architects 410,000
To be honest the last number seems unbelievable, which of course would reflect on the total.
Devrim
Well, it looks like the
Well, it looks like the calming effect of having Erdogan out of the country and Arinc playing nice cop to his nasty, is over. After Erdogan talking tough to the media in Tunisia this morning (see FT "Turkish markets rattled as Erdogan digs in" - paywall, soz), Rabble reports big demo heading back to Taksim (this photo - https://twitter.com/wearerabble/status/342664378136526848/photo/1 - from approx 20 mins ago).
One of the reporters on R4 Today this morning used the amusing but winning analogy of an air of anticipation, like waiting for "daddy" to come home, and knowing he's gonna be angry. Well, it seems he's signalled the kind of confrontational attitude that got people out onto the streets in the first place - and it seems to be having the same effect.
I guess we see what transpires tonight when he gets back, summons his cabinet and demands to know why the cops aren't cracking heads. Or something...
edit: some stuff from that FT article, while I mention it:
also, FWIW
(Huh, I hadn't realised we
(Huh, I hadn't realised we could embed tweets here - sweet!) Rabble also helping to break a story about a SIPTU (largest Irish TU) press release about arrested KESK unionists in Istanbul
got this from a friend inside
got this from a friend inside Turkey:
more from Ankara from
more from Ankara from http://turkishspring.nadir.org/index_eng.html
In case this has not been
In case this has not been posted anywhere else: http://internationalist-perspective.org/blog/2013/06/06/from-saving-a-park-to-5000000-workers-on-strike-background-to-the-events-in-turkey/
Yeah, things have gotten
Yeah, things have gotten really nasty in Ankara.
The cops are using a combo of TOMAs--basically urban tanks--and what the Turks call scorpions, a more compact militarized vehicle, to gas and water cannon protesters. And whatever chemicals they're using seem to have really adverse effects. I've directly spoken to more than one person who's been shot with orange-tinted water and gone home and thrown up all night. They're totally indiscriminate as well, just rolling into public square and releasing volleys of tear gas.
In fact, I've been surprised just how few cops I've seen face-to-face since this all kicked off. I've seen maybe 25 cops, but a dozen TOMAs.
A few questions. 1. How
A few questions.
1. How should we evaluatie the turkishspring.nadir updates? Anything known about that website that can be safely said here?
2 Leo wrote in an earlier comment: "the Turkish SWP is, in essence, a pro-government organization." In what sense? I could use some more in fo about that in debates here in the Netherlands.
basically some people
basically some people translating the twitter feed from http://www.sendika.org/category/english/ ... nadir is a long established radical publication platform from Germany
Chilli Sauce wrote: In fact,
Chilli Sauce
To my mind, this says that the regime is suffering from a shortage of coppers. They've probably stripped the rest of the country down to a skeleton staff in order to send the maximum number to Istanbul. This means that, faced with widespread revolt, they don't have the option of using finesse in their tactics. They're reduced to random brutality from within their armoured vehicles. It would also explain reports of the Army being used in a logistical role in Ankara.
If this is the correct interpretation, it is exceedingly good news. The Government is reaching the limits of its ability to impose its will on society. How long can he keep sending the coppers into battle against the protestors? I don't think that Erdogan would be willing to risk using the Army in a front line role, because:
(a) It would look so bad and drive even more people into the arms of the opposition - as well as causing difficulties for him in relations with other States; and
(b) He couldn't count on the Army to do what it's told. He knows he's pushing the envelope in terms of his deviation from Kemalism and his calculation has been that, with the support of the population, he can force the Army to tolerate him. If the population is opposing him, however, and the Army is required not merely to tolerate him but to impose his will, that's another matter entirely and not one of which he'd be confident of the outcome without the support of the CHP.
To be fair, I don't think
To be fair, I don't think "finesse" is actually a word in the Turkish policing dictionary. In fact the habitual knee-jerk brutality and casual indifference to, or even enthusiasm for, spilling civilian blood appears* to be one of the factors that contributed to the response of public sympathy (by many, if not all) to the initial attacks on a relatively small group of protestors. It might possibly go some way to explaining the different reactions by folk from the big cities (Istabul, Ankara, Izmir, etc) who witness this cop behaviour regularly enough, and the towns and villages of the Anatolian interior who are probably (guessing here) more used to seeing riot cops on the TV news than their own streets.
The use of armoured vehicles without accompanying police "infantry" can also be seen as a deliberate strategy - i.e. very demoralising for potential rioters to be faced with an enemy that stones and molotovs cannot really repel; saves on policing injuries bill; sends a clear message of "we don't care if people get killed in clearing this area"; etc.
However, it does have more police-oriented effects as well. One is the rather sinister effect of distancing the vehicle operators from the effects of the violence they're meeting out and the human-ness of their targets - a sort of Xboxisation effect, if you like. The other, is the manpower question - if you've got enough vehicles (capital cost question), then you can reduce the policing labour needed to clear a particular area. But with policing you have to factor in not only the capital and labour costs, but also the political "costs". Otherwise they'd be throwing a lot more armoured cars, water cannon, gas, LRADS, etc into public order situations, if selection of means was consequence-free.
It seems quite likely that the government is playing a different policing game around Taksim, where they are now (temporarily) under the eye of international media, and a more instrumental, "just get the job done, with minimal manpower and maximum 'shock and awe'" in Ankara and elsewhere.
* disclaimer: all of this is idle speculation, based on my own visits to Turkey and past conversations with Turkish comrades. I'm not close enough to the current action to really unpick the factors at play - in any case, large scale public upheavals are huge, complex phenomena that resist easy 'real-time' analysis - even for those in the middle of them.
Quote: a sort of Xboxisation
An unrelated fact, but Xbox 360 controllers are nowadays used in military applications for remote piloting.
The information about Ankara
The information about Ankara is correct.
Nope.
They've been supporting the AKP government for so long, it is ridiculous that now they claim to be opposed. They were even congratulated by the current prime minister in one of his speeches, and during the constitutional referandum, their leaflets were printed en masse by the current government.
Re the AKP support by the
Re the AKP support by the Turkish SWP, it should be pointed out that this appears to be a bit of a pattern by ISO groups towards "critical support" for Muslim Brotherhood or similar "moderate" (ha!) Islamist groups as "the lesser evil". See also Egypt in the last elections, the UK (the MAB are the UK wing of the MB), etc. From "Vote Labour with No Illusions" to "Vote Ikhwan with No Illusions", if you like...
edit: I don't know what the local front group of the MB in the Netherlands is, but it might be worth tracking them down and seeing what. if any, relations the local SWP have with them.
in the Netherlands, I
in the Netherlands, I suppose, that they (IS, the SWP clone) are supporting the ex-maoist SP which got nearly 10% last year ... don't think, that e.g. the Turkish ex-hoxhaite group DIDF which works in the SP would welcome Islamists in the party, even when they're introduced by the IS
iexist wrote: How do they
iexist
anti-imperialist alliance against US and British imperialism
http://www.leftcom.org/en/art
http://www.leftcom.org/en/articles/2013-06-06/some-considerations-on-the-demonstrations-in-turkey
Good article subprole and,
Good article subprole and, Leo, that's really interesting (if not unsurprising) about the Turkish SWP.
I just wanted to comment on Ocelot's post and just say that seems just about spot-on to me.
Quote: How do they justify
In Turkey, they used to do so claiming that the AKP government was advancing democracy and freedoms against the old Kemalist elites. Their slogan on the constitution was "Yes, but not enough" rather than "Yes, with no illusions". They haven't supported the AKP in any actual elections though, they tend to support the Kurdish nationalists recently. Now, of course, they'd say they are "critical" of the AKP.
In the past, before the IST's overt Islamist turn, the Turkish SWP used to support the Kemalists against the much dreaded fear of Islamic reaction, going so far as calling for a vote for the kemalist Republican People's Party in at least one election.
Quote: I don't know what the
Lol, no need to "track them down", I was member of that organization for almost 20 years, and needed some 18 months afterward to lose my Leninism (of most of it; still struggling, as some of my questions here might indicate). Some Turkish exiles in the Netherlands are members and/ or supporters, so there is some personal connection with IS politics in Turkey as well. And yes, the IS in the Netherlands used to be very soft on Islamism - as I did not recognise back then -, and yes, they supported (still do) the "ex-maoist " SP that for more than 20 years is jst a somewhat more left wing version of the Labour party. They (we, back then, I am sorry to say...) tried to enter, but failed. After that, the IS basically functions as left wing advisers of the SP, which, according to them, "should" do all kinds of things it simply won't.
However, this thread is on Turkey, not on the Dutch IS (which, by the way, has translated and published the Turkish IS-text earlier mentioned in this thread). My question was specifically aimed to the role the Turkish IS group is playing. I am not totally surprised at the answers; they fit the general, dismal, picture of IS politics in regards Islamic groups and governments. Thanks for the answers.
some interesting snippets
some interesting snippets from yesterday's news on http://turkishspring.nadir.org/index_eng.html
is this the area where the 1995 riots took place?
in Hamburg/Germany,
in Hamburg/Germany, Linksruck, the German SWP clone tried to recruit the Shura, a coordination of Mosques whose main component is Millî Görüş (disputed area between AKP and the more right-wing Saadet Partisi) plus the Iranian's state mosque in Hamburg into the local peace coordination around 9 or 10 years ago, trying to imitate the StWC ... but the majority of groups and individuals involved in the peace coordination blocked it: pacifist groups because they had doubts about the "peace-loving" character of the Shura (e.g. on Yugoslavia 1999) but the main protest against admitting the Shura came from Turkish, Kurdish and Iranian leftists and their German friends, who simply didn't want to work with Islamists, who had physically attacked some of them a couple of years before
On the Turkish version of the
On the Turkish version of the SWP being a pro-government party, here is the quite where Tayip thanks them for their support after the referendum:
Tayip Erdoğan
The bit in bold translates as "I congratulate my Revolutionary Socialist Workers Party friends". Also mentioned alongside them are "his brothers" in the Saadet Party (Islamicist), and the Büyük Birlik Party (ultranationalist)
A link can be found here.
Devrim
btw., does anyone know the
btw., does anyone know the position of Saadet Partisi, BBP and Hüda-Par on the current movement?
http://blog.occupiedlondon.or
http://blog.occupiedlondon.org/2013/06/09/new-website-occupied-taksi/
http://www.n-tv.de/politik/Tu
http://www.n-tv.de/politik/Tuerkische-Polizisten-begehen-Suizid-article10790921.html (in German) speaks of at least six police officers who have committed suicide during the last days due to the immense stress (shifts up to 120 hours), the same article also says that the newly-founded coppers union Emniyet-Sen (7000 members) sees the violence committed by cops as a result of violence inside the police
http://spanishrevolution11.wo
http://spanishrevolution11.wordpress.com/2013/06/09/the-free-republic-of-taksim/
the solidarity demonstrations
the solidarity demonstrations in Germany are split between (a bit larger) demos of Kurdish, Alevi and leftist organizations and demos by Kemalist and nationalist groups (mainly the CHP, the TGB which is a kind of youth org in sympathy with the left wing of the CHP and the ex-Maoist IP and the Atatuerk Idea Associations, very few "Idealists"), the PKK in Germany has ended its reluctant position and is now mobilising its supporters (can be up to 200.000 people) ... generally, according to http://www.labournet.de/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/PM_Kurdengezi.pdf (in German, sorry), the Kurdish left nationalist movement has adopted a position of support while being sceptical about the involvement of Kemalist and nationalist parties and groups, some of the statements are pointing out, that now normal people in Istanbul are experiencing what was normality for Kurds for the last decades
An Australian anarchist in
An Australian anarchist in turkey critiques the protests. Apols if posted already
http://www.citizen-k.net/blog/?p=599
Just read that piece, I'm not
Just read that piece, I'm not in Istanbul, so I can't comment fully but I can't really say it reflects my experience. Sure, mistakes are made: I f*cking hate the Guy Fawkes masks, and I've also noticed the growing number of food vendors in and near the protests.
What I do know is that here in Ankara, the majority of the folks on the front line--lighting the barricades and throwing stone--seem to be university students (there are a number of historically left-wing universities in the city). And that's part of the reason I think this "they're all middle class" is, well, basically bullshit. I mean, it's the same discourse we hear from the ruling class every time social movements pick up steam: these are just middle class elites, blah, blah, blah. I mean, when "guilt ridden" becomes your understanding of class dynamics rather actually looking at the shifting composition of the Turkish working class, that's pretty problematic.
And the author is probably right that this is a bit of protest tourism for a lot of people, but on one level, so what? Tear gas is used liberally by the Turkish state and regardless of why you've come to the protest, when the police attack, you have to respond. Whether that response is offensive or defensive, your little protest holiday is over. What's the old adage--cops' batons make a lot more revolutionaries than revolutionary organisations ever have.
I also really hate the discourse of the "TAZ". Jesus, you'd think the anarchist movement had moved beyond this infantile bullshit.
Wow that Aussie dude is a
Wow that Aussie dude is a knob. Check this shit out:
Patronising, much?
From the combination of his solipsism ("Me, me, me! I got shot! Was it really worth shedding my blood for these Turkish peasants?" etc) his misanthropic contempt for everybody involved, regardless of what class he (arbitarily) assigns them to, I'd say his particular rage for the middle class sounds suspiciously like self-hatred.
Meanwhile, back in Taksim, police efforts to clear the square have intensified this morning. Follow the action on your preferred feed.
Water cannon on fire in
Yeah, the molotovs thing
Yeah, the molotovs thing looks like it might be a bit of a setup, tbh.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/11/turkey-police-move-into-taksim-square#block-51b6ef53e4b0bfa7376c4a09
State media have taken a break from showing docs on Penguins and turned up at 6am (by appointment?) to film molotov throwers.
Joseph Kay wrote: Water
Joseph Kay
Good to see after hearing what those things are being used to do.
Edit: well maybe not.
An extra note on the Turkish
An extra note on the Turkish SWP: a leading member of this party, Hayko Bagdat, was making announcements from police speakers today calling for dispersal as the police were attacking the demonstrators in Taksim.
TOMAs come with self-rinsing
TOMAs come with self-rinsing capability - they just aim the water cannon down on the roof. This from the manufacturer's brochure site:
https://twitter.com/helvetius66/status/344388249734750208/photo/1
I thought this was a good
I thought this was a good article on barricades in Taskim: http://communisation.espivblogs.net/2013/06/08/an-impression-of-istanbul-experience/
It's all second hand to me of course but this level of fortification sounds pretty great.
Thanks for sharing, nice
Thanks for sharing, nice post.
Yeah, everyone I'm talking to
Yeah, everyone I'm talking to is claiming the Molotovs are the works of agents provocateurs.
There's been solidarity demos
There's been solidarity demos around iexist. I know it's not always easy for you to get out, but I'd be surprised if there hasn't been solidarity actions in NYC.
Quote: Hello comrades; This
From the occupied Gezi Park
From the occupied Gezi Park in Taksim/Istanbul:
(First half in English, second half in Turkish):
https://www.google.com/search?q=gezi+sefiller&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&channel=fflb
An amazing video showing the
An amazing video showing the square in the morning (before the last police attack 2 days ago):
http://vimeo.com/68207051#
(No subject)
[youtube]EqPSZ8uqBZM[/youtube]
There is a sense where trees
There is a sense where trees do have a symbolic value. "Foreign Relations 2013" reports that the sycamore trees in Istanbul's Gezi Park, have been adorned with the names of the dead, a memorial to the more than 50 people who died in the twin car-bombing in the Turkish border town of Reyhanli last month. A large number of the population of Reynali directly blamed the Erdogan's government involvement in the Syrian war for the bombings (probably carried out by jihadis with assistence from Turkish intelligence) and up to ten thousand protested on the streets, with some Turkish flags evident, and forced the police to retreat.
There have been protests in the Turkish border towns against the spread of war and the presence of jihadis since last October and protests have continued in the town of Antakya where many demonstrations have taken place. One worker here tweeted against the economic price that accompanies imperialist war.
MetroPOLL Strategic and Social Research Centre, based in Ankara, found that 28% of the Turkish public support the position of the Erdogan's clique on the war.
This anti-war expression is very much a minority in the Turkish protests and, while it could be used by the opposition, the leftists, etc., to support Turkish nationalism (and maybe against Syrian refugees), it nevertheless exists and can only grow as imperialist induced chaos increases around the region and those specifically in relation to the war against Syria.
(No subject)
[youtube]Q2Or3siw5fo[/youtube]
we went to istanbul during
we went to istanbul during the uprising to see what the workers content of this movement was. we made this short film about one set of striking workers in the park, from Hey Textile factory, who had been on strike for over a year: http://en.labournet.tv/video/6605/hey-textile-workers-strike
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/members-of-supporters-group-face-life-in-prison-for-involvement-in-gezi-protests.aspx?pageID=238&nID=71428&NewsCatID=339 (sorry for linking Hürriyet, haven't found a better source that quick):