Hi, I am forwarding another article by my colleague David Barchard to sum up 
todays events. 

with regards

Andreas


> From: David Barchard <[email protected]>
> Subject: The Twelfth Night
> Date: June 8, 2013 9:20:51 PM GMT+03:00
> To: undisclosed-recipients:;
> Bcc: [email protected]



The Twelfth Night (by David Barchard)

 

Saturday, the 12th day of the Gezi Park demonstrations, passed peacefully, 
though as this letter was being written, thousands of demonstrators were once 
again converging on Taksim Square. The media, so far at least, have once more 
ignored a major development. An nearby eyewitness observer commented in an 
e-mail: “Just this minute as I am writing this to you tens of thousands of  
people are shouting and protesting and walking towards Taksim, I can see them 
from my Terrace and it is so  loud, but what do the leading TV stations NTV, 
CNN, SKY and Haber T do?
Not a single word !! They still haven't learned their lessons.

      As I write, CNN Turk, now famous for its ‘penguins’ documentary is 
running its   evening news bulletin—and the  news is entirely about a meeting 
between the prime minister and the president of the Grand Nation Assembly. NTV 
however seems to have changed – its 8 pm bulletin is running film of a massive 
joint demonstration at Taksim by supporters of all Istanbul’s main football 
clubs. It is rather like the ‘Blues’ and the ‘Greens’ of 532 AD all over again. 
It implies a significant widening of the popular base of the protest  from the 
professional middle class environmentalists among whom the movement began. [See 
photograph attached.] The new demonstrators are complaining: “No one has 
listened to our demands and no real steps have been taken.”

      An observer in Taksim comments: “Carsi rocking Taksim Square: 
siyah!(black) beyaz!(white). Red flares.Taksim is a stadium now- protesters 
never been this hyped up.” Another wrily observes: “First time in Turkish 
history, Beşiktaş fans cheering for the arrival of vast Fenerbahçe numbers into 
their territory.”People on the spot claim that the demonstrators are well over 
100,000.

     A similar demonstration by football supporters is also taking place around 
Tunalı Hilmi Caddesi: the placards the demonstrators are carrying make it clear 
that they criticize the government and its policies. But in Ankara it is 
raining. In Izmir the demonstrations are described as being ‘like a festival.’ 
In Antalya they are banging saucepans, and in Kocaeli (İzmit) a little 
strangely, they are protesting by dancing the tango in the streets.

      The BBC Turkish Service transmission however took a different tack 
tonight – it opened this evening with a report on the degree of popular support 
for Mr Erdoğan. Then it switched to news sequence about the war in Syria.

     Meanwhile everyone’s thoughts are already turning to what may – or may not 
– happen next week. A Russian observer, Leonid Bershidsky, forecast glumly 
today that the Turkish riots were more like the Russian ones of 6 May 2012, and 
not like those in the Arab world – where many casualties were sustained. 
Turkish demonstrators, like Russian ones, are middle class kids and Mr 
Bershidsky believes the demonstrators will cave in quickly once ‘an 
intervention’ starts. 
[http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-06/turkey-s-revolt-will-fail-ask-the-russians-.html]
 Türkiye newspaper gave an indication of what may follow. It says the public 
prosecutors are seeing whether charges can be brought against demonstrators 
under Article 312 of the criminal code – attempting to stage an armed coup. So 
far arrests have been few in number.   

      (Lots of people, including the former Chief of General Staff İlker Başbuğ 
who was in court Friday, are already facing such charges. General Başbuğ who 
was head of the armed forces between 2008 and 2010 told the court to let his 
colleagues go and do whatever they were going to do to him alone.) In Russia 
only 12 people are on trial for the May 2012 protests, but Turkish trials 
traditionally include hundreds. So far repercussions are small: Five people 
were detained in Adana for tweeting and seven more are wanted by police. 
CNNTurk news reported earlier in the day that a Greek Erasmus student, named 
only as Iatridis, is being deported for "speaking to a TV channel.”  Not a 
single police officer is definitely known to have been detained, though there 
have been claims of action against individuals who showed excessive violence.

      Meanwhile the AKP considered its options. After a central committee 
meeting, the deputy prime minister, Hüseyin Çelik, deputy chairman of the AKP 
and party spokesman, announced that – contrary to speculation—the party was not 
contemplating early elections. (Apart from racheting up tensions, these would 
have been extremely unpopular with parliamentary deputies who strongly dislike 
losing two years of the life of parliament.)

        Kadir Topbaş, Istanbul’s mayor, declared that there would not now be a 
shopping mall or hotel at Taksim Square –but instead a replica of the military 
barracks of Mahmut II would be constructed this was because the prime minister 
wanted it.. There would be lots of trees.  Topbaş made it clear that this 
extremely local decision is being taken personally by the prime minister rather 
than any subordinate person or body. This news disappointed the governments’ 
critics.

     The American journalist and commentator, Claire Berlinski, said that she 
had heard rumours – but she stressed they were only rumours—about a build up of 
police in Istanbul. “It would require going full-on Tiananmen. They just can't 
be that stupid,” Berlinski wrote.

 
         The United States Embassy deleted the tweet it published on Friday in 
response to the prime minister’s claim that 17 people had been killed by 
American police in the OccupyWallStreet riots—but told reporters that it stood 
by the facts.

It emerged in the London Times that Britain had recently supplied at least some 
of the tear gas being used by the Turkish authorities—and tweeters claimed that 
the UK government (which has remained steadfastly tight-lipped over the 12 
days) is considering issuing an export license to sell more gas to Turkey.

     One UK body, Amnesty International, which, in some peoples’ view, has been 
somewhat uncommunicative about the human rights situation in Turkey in recent 
years  has issued a strong statement.   
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYOPgvi_Nk4

      Meanwhile the New York Times brushed aside complaints from the prime 
minister about its willingness to publish a full page advertisement proclaiming 
the demonstrator’s demands. The Minister for EU Affairs, Egemen Bağış, 
suggested that  Turkish expatriates who organised and partly funded the $53,000 
advertisement were “trying to block foreign investment” He asked "Do they think 
NYT readers have power over us?"

    Finally Norman Stone, Scotland’s finest living writer and professor at 
Bilkent, has launched a salvo of pithily-written articles in the British press 
about the demonstrations. They can be found at:

http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/8927491/whats-eating-turkey/

and 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/turkey/10106460/Woman-in-the-red-dress-becomes-a-symbol-of-defiance-to-Tayyib-Erdogan.html

and

http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/norman-stone-protests-show-the-frailty-of-turkeys-progress-8643446.html


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