ANKARA –MERSIN- (ST)_The Turkish police on Sunday for the tenth running day oppressed protestors who have taken to the streets across Turkey demanding Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan resignation.
Reuters said that riot police used teargas and water cannon to disperse anti-government protesters from a square in the capital, Ankara, just a few kilometers from where Erdogan spoke.
He held six rallies on Sunday, a measure of tensions after a week of the biggest demonstrations and worst rioting of his decade in power. He warned protesters that his patience has its limits and compared the unrest with an army attempt six years ago to curb his power.
In the commercial center Istanbul, tens of thousands flooded the central Taksim Square, where protests began nine days ago when police used teargas and water cannon against a peaceful demonstration over plans to build on a park there. Many see Turkey’s secular order threatened by Erdogan.
Protesters, many camped out in tents, now control a large area around the square, with approach roads barricaded by masonry, paving stones and steel rods. Police have withdrawn completely from the area, water cannon kept hundreds of meters away by the side of the Bosphorus waterway.
Violent police action, however, has drawn criticism from the West and Erdogan has increasingly accused foreign forces of trying to aggravate the troubles.
He also rounded on speculators, foreign and domestic, in the country’s capital markets, vowing to “choke” those who he said were growing rich off “the sweat of the people”, and urging Turks to put their money in state not private banks.
“Those who attempt to sink the bourse, you will collapse … If we catch your speculation, we will choke you. No matter who you are, we will choke you,” he said.
Turkey’s financial markets were turbulent last week and investors are preparing for more volatility this week.
Early on Friday, the lira hit its weakest point against its euro/dollar basket since October 2011, while Istanbul’s main share index lost around 15 percent over the week. The yield of Turkey’s two-year benchmark sovereign bond hit a six-month high on Thursday.
T. Fateh