Interior Minister says union strike 'illegal,' warns of police action

Published June 17th, 2013 - 09:30 GMT
Anti-government protesters shout slogans as they stand on barricades in Istanbul June 16, 2013.
Anti-government protesters shout slogans as they stand on barricades in Istanbul June 16, 2013.

Tensions escalated in Turkey on Monday as the interior minister said the nationwide union strike by demonstrators protesting against police violence was “illegal."

“There is an attempt to bring people on to the streets through illegal protests like a strike,” Muammer Guler told reporters in Ankara. “I want to state that it will not be permitted,” reported AFP.

On Sunday, two of Turkey's main trade union federations, KESK and DISK, announced their nationwide strike as police cracked down on anti-government demonstrators in Istanbul overnight.

“We are going on strike tomorrow across the country, with DISK and other vocational organizations,” Baki Cinar said. “Our demand is for police violence to end immediately,” AFP reported.

Tens of thousands of Turkish government supporters gathered in Istanbul on Sunday, as Turkish riot police fired tear gas and water cannon at the defiant demonstrators.

According to AP, authorities evicted activists from the Istanbul park and maintained a hard line stance at any attempt to rekindle protests that have shaken the country in recent days.

Police in uniform and plainclothes sealed off Istanbul's central Taksim Square and adjacent Gezi Park, where crews worked through the night to clear away all traces of a sit-in that started more than two weeks ago and became the focus of the strongest challenge to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in his 10 years in office, AP said.

Turkey’s recent trouble first began when a peaceful sit-in to save Gezi Park’s 600 trees from being razed in a redevelopment plan prompted a brutal police response on May 31.

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