Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Turkey premier agrees to halt contentious park project

Date:

Share post:

Istanbul: Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday agreed to halt plans to redevelop an Istanbul park at the centre of two weeks of mass anti-government unrest, in a move protesters welcomed as “positive”.

It marked the first easing of tensions in the standoff, which has presented the Islamist-rooted government with the biggest challenge of its decade-long rule and earned it criticism from the West.

Hours after giving a “last warning” to defiant demonstrators camping out in Gezi Park, Erdogan made the concession in his first talks with a key group of protesters to defuse tensions in the crisis.

“The positive outcome from tonight is the prime minister’s explanation that the project will not continue before the final court decision,” Tayfun Kahraman, a spokesman for the Taksim Solidary group, seen as the most representative of the protest movement, said in televised remarks.

An peaceful sit-in to save Gezi Park’s 600 trees from being razed prompted a brutal police response on May 31, spiralling into nationwide outpourings of anger against Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), seen as increasingly authoritarian.

The promise to abide by a court decision suspending the redevelopment of Gezi Park was hailed as a win by the protesters, who had earlier balked at Erdogan’s offer to hold a referendum over plans to reconstruct Ottoman-era military barracks on the site in return for evacuating the park.

Speaking after the four-hour emergency meeting, Deputy Prime Minister Huseyin Celik said the government would respect the court’s decision on the project suspension and insisted a popular vote to seal the fate of the park would go ahead.

“But Gezi Park protesters should stop their demonstration now,” he warned.

The court process is expected to take several months.

In the meantime, a probe is under way to investigate the use of excessive police force in dealing with the protesters across the country, Celik added.

Some 5,000 people have been injured and four have died in the unrest so far, which has seen police use tear gas, rubber ballets and water cannons on demonstrators who have hurled back fireworks, rocks and molotov cocktails. (AFP)

Related articles

Police notice to Telangana IAS officer for posting AI-generated image about tree-cutting

Hyderabad, April 16:  The Telangana Police have issued a notice to senior IAS officer Smita Sabharwal for reposting...

SC fixes May 14 for hearing on pleas against law dropping CJI from EC appointment panel

New Delhi, April 16: The Supreme Court on Wednesday fixed May 14 for hearing on a clutch of...

US Vice President Vance, Second Lady to visit Delhi, Jaipur and Agra during India visit

Washington, April 16: US Vice-President J.D. Vance and his Indian-descent wife Usha Vance will be visiting Delhi, Agra...

Operation Brahma: Indian sends prefabricated office and housing units to quake-hit Myanmar

Yangon, April 16: India's humanitarian assistance to earthquake-hit Myanmar under Operation Brahma continued on Wednesday as the next...