19 Apr 2024
Thursday 3 October 2013 - 16:11
Story Code : 54853

Rights group accuses Turkey of violating human rights during protests

 

[caption id="attachment_37630" align="alignright" width="234"] Turks participate in an anti-government festival called Man Made of Tear Gas held on the shores of the Kad?koy district on the Asian side of Istanbul on July 7, 2013.[/caption]
TEHRAN (Tasnim) - The Turkish authorities committed gross human rights violations during protests that rocked the country in June, an international human rights group said.



"The attempt to smash the Gezi Park protest movement involved a string of human rights violations on a huge scale, Andrew Gardner, the London-based Amnesty Internationals Turkey expert, said in a statement on Wednesday.

They include the wholesale denial of the right to peaceful assembly and violations of the rights to life, liberty and the freedom from torture and ill-treatment, he added.

What started as a relatively small environmentalist movement to save Istanbuls central Gezi Park from re-development evolved into a nationwide wave of protests against Prime Minister , who is seen as increasingly authoritarian.

The Turkish polices crackdown was often heavy-handed. Six people were killed and more than 8,000 injured during the protests, according to the Turkish doctors union, AFP reported.

Amnesty detailing the use of live ammunition, tear gas, water cannons, plastic bullets and beatings said the deaths of at least three protesters were linked to the abusive use of force by police. The police routinely fired directly at protesters, bystanders and sometimes into residential buildings and medical facilities, resulting in hundreds of injuries, according to witnesses interviewed by the rights group.

The Amnesty website carried a video accompanying the reports release and entitled When Turkey took torture to the streets.

The report said the wave of violence had harmed Turkeys ambition to become a democratic model for Muslim countries and exposed a striking intolerance of opposing voices.

Amnesty said there was still time for Turkey to comply with international laws and conventions in the unrests aftermath, which has seen the regime take a tough line on protesters.

By Tasnim News Agency

 

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