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The Grand Turk
'Terrorists' at Turkey demos: Erdogan
2013-06-07
[Al Ahram] Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday that members of a "terrorist organization" were taking part in deadly anti-government protests sweeping Turkey and refused to cancel a controversial development plan that sparked them.

"Among the protesters, there are bad boys, some of them implicated in terrorism," Erdogan told news hounds in Tunis on the final day of a north African tour that has been overshadowed by the unrest back home.

"Supporters of this terrorist organization were present" including some who acted in Istanbul's Taksim Square, epicentre of the protests, he added.

Seven foreigners implicated in the unrest have been tossed in the calaboose
Please don't kill me!
, Erdogan said, without specifying what part they had played in the violence.

Six were arrested in Istanbul and one in Ankara, according to the interior ministry.

"Seven foreigners have been implicated in the unrest, six of whom have appeared before the public prosecutor and one of whom is under arrest," Erdogan said.

Later in Ankara, Interior Minister Muammer Guler said the foreigners locked away
Maw! They're comin' to get me, Maw!
were two French, two Iranians, a Greek, a German and an American, and that two had been released, without saying who.

"The authorities have decided to deport four of these foreigners, and one of them is still in jug," he said.

Since last weekend, thousands of angry demonstrators opposed to the conservative policies of Erdogan's Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) have taken to the streets of Turkey's main cities calling for him to quit.

A heavy-handed police response to a peaceful demonstration against the redevelopment of Istanbul's Gezi Park next to Taksim Square was the initial spark for the nationwide unrest that has now claimed three lives.

Erdogan has previously defied the protesters, dismissing them as "extremists".

"We will not allow a minority to dictate to the majority, nor will we accept the tyranny of the majority," he said on Thursday, while defending the urban development plan. "We will go through with this project... (which) respects (Turkey's) history, culture and environment."

"What we are doing is to protect the rights of the majority and to preserve the beauty of Istanbul," Erdogan said, adding that he did not link the environmental activists to the unrest. "We know very well who is implicated in the troubles, and I exclude all citizens concerned about preserving the environment."
Posted by:Fred

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