17 THOUSAND POLICEMEN DISPERSED RALLY IN ISTANBUL
PanARMENIAN.Net
02.05.2007 14:15 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nearly 600 people have been arrested in Istanbul
as police launched a dramatic clampdown on left-wing demonstrators
trying to hold a May Day rally.
17 thousand policemen fired tear gas and used batons to stop the
crowd marching to Taksim Square, where they were due to mark the 30th
anniversary of "Bloody May Day".
Thirty-four people died in 1977 after a gunman fired, triggering
a stampede.
This year’s rally is taking place in a country already tense over a
disputed presidential election.
The constitutional court is currently examining an opposition call to
cancel the election of Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as president. The
first round of parliamentary voting ended in disarray on Friday.
After some violent clashes in one area of the city, a handful of trade
union leaders were allowed into the square to lay red carnations in
memory of those who died in 1977.
But police stopped television crews setting up satellite dishes in the
square – one channel did however film events from a nearby building.
Meanwhile, public transport was paralyzed, as the authorities sealed
off main roads, cancelled ferries and closed underground stations
Although the march was not specifically linked to the ongoing tension
over the election, correspondents say some protesters raised their
fists and called for the resignation of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan – who supports Mr Gul as president, BBC reports.