11-06-2013, 11:55 AM
![[Image: BMeU_a9CMAAfRCP.jpg:large]](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BMeU_a9CMAAfRCP.jpg:large)
LAWYER WITH HIS GOWN SUBDUED ON THE FLOOR HANDCUFFED FOR SAYING SLOGANS AT THE CENTRAL COURT! https://twitter.com/glyroxy/status/34440...80/photo/1
![[Image: BMeU_a9CMAAfRCP.jpg:large]](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BMeU_a9CMAAfRCP.jpg:large)
Quote:Twitter,[URL="http://www.radikal.com.tr/index/istanbul"]Governor Happy Molotov activists, who revealed his identity
Molotov, who at the time of Taksim, Istanbul Governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu, and getting caught in SDP activists said.
[COLOR=#3B5998 !important]
TAGS:Istanbul Governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu, Istanbul's Taksim lenses worn at the time of laying and back-pocket bulge motolofkokteyliclaim that the police have been raised because of the identity of the person on twitter from the said. Owner's name to BayraktaroÄŸlu Happy, "Taksim, possibly armed with walkie-talkies to share and view social media, the police claimed that people are arrested. Then SDP activist. Revolutionary Headquarters before the operation up to six months in prison those who announce birisi.Polis , your knowledge, "he said.[/COLOR]
YES 70 DETENTION
Special operations, entered the SDP in Beyoglu building by breaking the door with a sledgehammer. Istanbul Governor Huseyin Mutlu "refuge of those events SDP building, the number of detainees was 70. Weapons and machetes there," he said. Governor Happy twitter account also, raid geçensilahın and shared a photo of the blades.
![[Image: BMelcYlCUAEte4l.jpg:large]](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BMelcYlCUAEte4l.jpg:large)
A petrol bomb is thrown at riot police in Taksim Square in Istanbul on Tuesday. Photograph: OSMAN ORSAL/REUTERShttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun...a7376c4a33![[Image: adana-624x360.jpg]](http://www.millibirlikhaber.com/wp-content/uploads/adana-624x360.jpg)
David Guyatt Wrote:Erdogan says riots "harm our economy and image".
Oh no! We can't have Turkey's image ruined, so let's just send in the riot police with tear gas and water-cannon and fifth columnists so the world can film it.
Ah, that's better.
The image of brutality is now restored. Only the economy to go.
Quote:Why it has become such a fraught issue was hinted at in a statement issued in the midst of the protests by Istanbul's Chamber of Physicians, insisting: "It is not [the] job [of police and officials] to protect the profitability of the contractors who will build a shopping mall on Taksim Square."
The rapid urbanisation of Turkey and huge growth of Istanbul in the past two decades has defined the transformation of Turkish society and politics. The continuing migration from rural areas like eastern Anatolia to Istanbul has fuelled the growth of the city, driving a building boom. Politically, it has been prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's moderate Islamist AKP that has benefited from this expansion, the recently urbanised being more socially conservative.
While tension between Turkey's old secular elites and this new class have long been inevitable, two consequences have not been. As Transparency International made clear in a recent survey of Turkey, while its elections largely have been free and fair, corruption, especially linked to the construction industry, has been a growing problem. In April, for the first time ever, two officials in Turkey's public housing administration which enjoys a virtually unopposed monopoly to redevelop private and public land, including a 20-year, $400bn urban renewal budget were charged with extorting bribes and abuse of power.
Indeed those who have benefited from recent large projects have allegedly included key players in Turkish society, including members of Erdogan's own party, a company run by Erdogan's son-in-law and the Turkish armed forces.
The perception in Turkey that barely regulated development is being driven for the economic benefit of entrenched interests with links to party politics, rather than in the public interest, has been fuelled by the hard data about some of the most controversial developments, including Gezi Park.
As a recent article in Hurriyet Daily News made clear, Turkey, and Istanbul in particular, hardly needs more malls. Istanbul already has so many that 11 in the city have been forced to close down.
All of these are issues that have been exacerbated by the majoritarian political style of Erdogan and the AKP. In refusing to back down over the mall development in a speech on Saturday, Erdogan underlined suspicions that he has no interest in dialogue with those who oppose him at a time when he is being accused of leading his country down an ever more authoritarian route.