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News ID: 114809
Publish Date : 08 May 2023 - 22:26

Protesters Arrested for Violence at Turkish Rally

ANKARA (Al Jazeera) – More than a dozen people have been arrested over violence against opposition supporters at an election rally in Turkey’s eastern city of Erzurum, according to the justice minister.
Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) was speaking from the top of a campaign bus on Sunday when a large group of roughly 200 protesters began throwing rocks.
Imamoglu was campaigning on behalf of CHP leader and presidential candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the main opponent to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, days before Sunday’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
The video later shows Imamoglu being taken inside by his entourage, the bus driving off and police later dispersing the group with water cannon.
Seven people were injured in the incident, according to Erzurum Governor Okay Memis.
Speaking on the news channel A Haber on Monday, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said an investigation was being conducted and 13 people had been arrested so far.
Kilicdaroglu posted a video on social media following Sunday’s incident in which he accused the people responsible of being a “militarist coalition” who seeks to “scare people away from the ballot box”.
Speaking on a television program later in the evening, Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu claimed the incident was “theater”.
“They provoke such incidents. Then they claim, ‘They did this to us. They did that to us,’” he said. “… They had put forward a speech that was meant to agitate, to provoke the crowd.”
Sunday’s elections are seen as among the most consequential in Turkey’s modern history. Erdogan is facing the biggest political challenge of his two-decade rule.
If no candidate secures more than half the votes in the first round of voting, a May 28 run-off will be held between the two leading candidates.
Most polls for the parliamentary elections show the main opposition alliance ahead of the People’s Alliance, which includes Erdogan’s AK Party, the nationalist MHP, the right-wing Great Unity Party and the New Welfare Party.
The opposition Nation Alliance includes Kilicdaroglu’s main opposition CHP, the center-right IYI Party, the Islamist Felicity Party, the Democrat Party and two parties founded by former Erdogan allies, the Deva and Future parties.