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		Police use force to break up protests at a university in Turkey's 
		capital
		[March 27, 2025]  
		By ROBERT BADENDIECK 
		ISTANBUL (AP) — Police used pepper spray, plastic pellets and water 
		cannon against protesters in Turkey's capital early Thursday, 
		potentially reigniting tensions after two days of relative calm in the 
		country's biggest anti-government protests in over a decade.
 The demonstrations began last week following the arrest of Istanbul 
		Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, a key rival to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. 
		Imamoglu, jailed pending trial on corruption charges many see as 
		politically motivated, is also accused of supporting terrorism. The 
		government insists the judiciary is independent, but critics say the 
		evidence is based on secret witnesses and lacks credibility.
 
 Early Thursday, student demonstrators tried to march and gathered to 
		read a statement near the gates at Middle East Technical University, 
		pro-opposition broadcaster Halk TV and local media reported. They were 
		met by security forces who deployed pepper spray, water cannon and 
		plastic pellets. A standoff ensued where the students hid behind a 
		barricade of dumpsters until the police charged to detain them.
 
 Melih Meric, a legislator with Imamoglu's Republican People’s Party or 
		CHP, was seen soaked with water and suffering from pepper spray 
		exposure. “My student friends only wanted to make a press statement, but 
		the police strictly did not allow it, this is the result," Meric said in 
		social media videos.
 
 Officials have not said how many people were detained.
 
 Also Thursday, eight journalists who were jailed awaiting trial after 
		covering the protests were released, a media freedom group said. Seven 
		who were detained Tuesday in morning raids on their homes were released 
		in Istanbul following appeals, the Media and Law Studies Association 
		said, while an eighth was freed in the western port city of Izmir.
 
		
		 
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            A protester waves Turkish flag during a protest against the arrest 
			of Istanbul's Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, outside Caglayan courthouse, in 
			Istanbul, Turkey, Saturday, March 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Emrah Gurel) 
            
			
			
			 
            CHP leader Ozgur Ozel had promised that lawmakers would stand 
			alongside protesters in the hope of lowering tensions. He also 
			warned Tuesday that if the police provoked demonstrators, he would 
			“call for 500,000 people to (come to) the place that will disturb” 
			the authorities the most.
 At least 1,400 people were detained in the first six days of the 
			protests, the interior minister said Tuesday.
 
 Demonstrations involving hundreds of thousands have swept across 
			major cities, including opposition-organized rallies outside 
			Istanbul City Hall. Other major protests have been held in 
			Istanbul's districts of Kadikoy and Sisli districts in recent days.
 
 Meanwhile, Imamoglu, speaking from prison via social media 
			Wednesday, denounced police violence against protesters, “I cannot 
			call them police because my honorable police would not commit this 
			cruelty to the young children of the nation,” he said.
 
 Imamoglu has been confirmed as the CHP's candidate for presidential 
			elections due in 2028 but which could come earlier. He has performed 
			well in recent polls against Erdogan, for whom his election as mayor 
			of Turkey’s largest city in 2019 was a major blow.
 
			
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