ISTANBUL
— Istanbul went into a security lockdown on Friday as thousands of
police manned barricades and closed streets to stop May Day rallies at
Taksim Square, a symbolic point for protests.
Citing security
concerns, authorities shut down much of the city's public transport and
dispatched riot police to block Taksim off from demonstrators. A
traditional rallying ground for leftists, the central square saw weeks
of unrest in 2013.
Hundreds of flag-waving
protesters gathered in the nearby Besiktas neighborhood, where they were
held back by lines of police. Thousands of protesters also gathered to
march in the capital Ankara.
Critics say President Tayyip Erdogan and the government have become more authoritarian ahead of June elections.
"This meeting is
peaceful and is not armed," opposition politician Mahmut Tanal, holding a
pocket-sized book of the Turkish constitution, told Reuters in
Istanbul. "People want to express their problems but the government
doesn't want those problems to be heard ahead of elections."
The normally thronged
Isitklal shopping avenue leading to Taksim was deserted, with shops
shuttered and metal barricades blocking off side streets. Police
helicopters circled overhead.
A usually bustling
square lined with cafes and hotels, Taksim was filled with police buses,
ambulances and satellite broadcast trucks. A pair of tourists emerged
from a hotel to find the area sealed off and nervously made their way
around police lines.
The government had said Taksim would only be open to those who came peacefully and not for "illegal demonstrations."
"I wish May 1 to be celebrated in a festive mood without provocations," Erdogan said in a statement.
Erdogan has previously
dismissed protesters as "riff-raff" and terrorists, outraged by the
unrest in 2013 that brought unwanted international attention and posed
the biggest challenge to his AK Party since it came to power in 2002
Istanbul Goes Into Security Lockdown to Stop May Day Rallies
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Friday, May 01, 2015
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