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Turkey protests: Union to start two-day strike

Wednesday, June 5, 2013 11:11
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(Before It's News)

 

 

 

One of Turkey’s big trade union groups is staging a two-day strike to support continuing anti-government protests in a number of cities.

The left-wing Kesk trade union confederation, representing some 240,000 workers, accused the government of committing “state terror”.

Protests and clashes with police continued into the night on Monday.

A second death in the protests has been confirmed by the governor’s office in the southern city of Antakya.

Abdullah Comert, 22, a member of the youth wing of the opposition Republican People’s Party, was “seriously wounded… after gunfire from an unidentified person,” the governor’s office said, adding that he died later in hospital.

Earlier, the Turkish Doctors’ Union said 20-year-old Mehmet Ayvalitas was hit by a car on Sunday which ignored warnings to stop and ploughed into a crowd of protesters in the Mayis district of Istanbul.

 

Bulent Alireza of Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington: “Longer term. people might review their image of Turkey from positive to negative”

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan went ahead with a trip to Morocco and insisted the situation was improving.

The strike, which will last for two days from 12:00 on Tuesday (09:00 GMT), is expected to affect schools and universities along with government offices.

In a statement, Kesk said: “The state terror implemented against entirely peaceful protests is continuing in a way that threatens civilians’ life safety.”

The confederation, representing 11 unions, accused the government of undermining democracy.

Mr Erdogan remained defiant on Monday in the face of continuing violence, dismissing any suggestion of a “Turkish Spring”.

In a televised news conference he said: “The main opposition party CHP has provoked my innocent citizens. Those who make news [and] call these events the Turkish Spring do not know Turkey.”

After arriving in Morocco, he insisted the situation was “calming down”.

“On my return from this visit, the problems will be solved,” he told reporters.

In contrast, President Abdullah Gul, adopted a more conciliatory tone, defending the right to protest while urging calm.

“If there are different opinions, different situations, different points of view and dissent, there is nothing more natural that being able to voice those differences,” he was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency.

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