Twitter says Turkish minister's LGBT comments about protesters "hateful
conduct"
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[February 02, 2021]
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey's
interior minister on Tuesday condemned protesters at a top Istanbul
university as "LGBT deviants" in a statement which Twitter deemed as
hateful conduct.
Students and teachers at Istanbul's Bogazici University have held
protests for the last month against the appointment of Melih Bulu as
rector by President Tayyip Erdogan, which they said was undemocratic.
On Monday, scuffles broke out between police and those protesting
against the detention of four people after images were shared on social
media of them laying a picture on the ground that mixed sacred Islamic
imagery with symbols supporting LGBT issues.
Police entered campus later in the day to disperse students who were
planning an all-night vigil outside the rector's building and detained
159 in total throughout the day, the governor's office said.
Istanbul police said 61 people were still detained and were giving
statements on Tuesday.
"Should we tolerate the LGBT deviants who insult the great Kaaba? Of
course not. Should we tolerate the LGBT deviants who attempted to occupy
the rector's building? Of course not," Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu
said on Twitter, repeating a phrase that sparked outrage amongst
students and rights groups over the weekend.
In a rare move, Twitter placed a warning on Soylu's tweet, saying it
violated rules about hateful conduct but added it decided to keep it on
the site as it might be in the public interest for it to remain
accessible.
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Students shout slogans as they wait in front of the Bogazici
University in solidarity with fellow students inside the campus who
are protesting against the new rector and the arrest of two
students, in Istanbul, Turkey February 1, 2021. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File
Photo
Turkey's presidency communications director, Fahrettin Altun, said
Monday's protests were a response to the university's decision to
block an application to set up an LGBTI club - which he said tried
to "trample our values underfoot".
The government has harshly criticised the protesters, with Erdogan
praising his party's youth wing on Monday for "not being the LGBT
youth."
The main opposition CHP has supported the protests and several
parliamentarians from the pro-Kurdish HDP were turned away at the
university's entrance on Monday.
Erdogan's critics say the president and his AK Party, which promotes
conservative Islamic values, have eroded social rights and tolerance
during their 18 years in power. Erdogan's supporters say he has
restored freedom of religious expression in a once strongly secular
republic.
Bulu, who applied to be an AKP candidate in a 2015 parliamentary
election, was the first rector chosen from outside a university
since a military coup in Turkey in 1980, Bogazici faculty members
have said.
(Reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen; Editing by Dominic Evans, William
Maclean)
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