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2013-06-05

Turkish premier brands protesters extremists - Sound Familiar? DHS ring a bell?

Vatic Note:  Gee, with all these  protests how are these elite going to protect their assets?  How are they going to get the people to fight in  wars that everyone on the planet knows are scams used for corporations to make profits and gain power.  These are fascists with a long term plan to run the world without interference from the fodder for their wars.

Remember all leaders on both sides of a false flag conflict are in on the scam. Turkey is no different.  Their leaders have been involve d with the Zionists for years.  They have colluded more than once on many subjects.  One example was the massacre in Turkey of the ARmenians, ONCE THEY TOOK THEIR GUNS.

I had been in touch with a turkish citizen by computer and he informed me that the president of Turkey was heavily tied in with the Khazars in Israel, and that  explains the reaction of the people to what is going on there, since it matches our reaction.   Only we are choosing a more European way of dealing with it like they did in WW II.

They are trying desperately to get ours for the same reason.  Depopulation, through poisoning our food, water, air, and cleaning products.  Chemical, bacterialogical attacks  against us.  Notice how WHO is announcing another bogus pandemic?  They got caught bogusing up the first one.

The people are rioting everywhere including Sweden, Germany, Spain, etc and for good reason.  THE SHEEP ARE WAKING UP AND GOING WITH THE ACTIVITS NOW.   Its way past time.   Time to take all this to another level while we still have the numbers to do so.

Turkish premier brands protesters extremists - Sound Familiar?  DHS ring a bell?
http://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/turkish-pm-erdogan-calls-calm-days-protests-091104242.html;_ylt=AtklXgUWxOxCxz71TzZ0eA_pwsRG;_ylu=X3oDMTQzY2E2NG11BG1pdANUb3AgU3RvcmllcwRwa2cDNzBjOTQzOTYtZmEyOC0zODIyLWE5M2EtMGQ2NDc2YTJhNjU4BHBvcwMzBHNlYwNNZWRpYUJMaXN0TWl4ZWRMUENBVGVtcAR2ZXIDNDIxNWY4MTAtY2M2Ny0xMWUyLTk2ZjctZWUyNzIyNTc0YTA3;_ylg=X3oDMTJucmYxbXVvBGludGwDc2cEbGFuZwNlbi1zZwRwc3RhaWQDMGZiNWUxOGQtNDk3MS0zZTE3LTliMzEtNWFiMGY0OGUwYTk1BHBzdGNhdANuZXdzBHB0A3N0b3J5cGFnZQ--;_ylv=3
  • Demonstrators clash with Turkish riot police during a protest against Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling AK Party in central Ankara June 2, 2013. REUTERS/Umit Bektas 
  • View PhotoDemonstrators clash with Turkish riot police during a protest against Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling AK Party in central Ankara June 2, 2013. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
By Birsen Altayli and Ayla Jean Yackley

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan accused anti-government protesters on Monday of walking "arm-in-arm with terrorism", remarks that could further inflame public anger after three days of some of the most violent riots in decades.

Hundreds of police and protesters have been injured since Friday, when a demonstration to halt construction in a park in an Istanbul square grew into mass protests against a heavy-handed crackdown and what opponents call Erdogan's authoritarianism. Protests have been held in dozens of cities.

The demonstrations showed no sign of abating on Monday with protesters gathering again in Taksim Square. Barricades of rubble hindered traffic alongside the Bosphorus waterway and blocked entry into the area. Leftist groups hung out red and black flags and banners calling on Erdogan to resign and declaring: "Whatever happens, there is no going back."

In Ankara, protesters threw up a barricade in the Kizilay government quarter and lit a fire in the road as a helicopter circled overhead. Police charged demonstrators, mostly teenagers, and scattered them using tear gas and water cannon.

Erdogan has dismissed the protests as the work of secularist enemies never reconciled to the mandate of his AK party, which has roots in Islamist parties banned in the past but which also embraces centre-right and nationalist elements. The party has won three straight elections and overseen an economic boom, increasing Turkey's influence in the region.

"This is a protest organised by extremist elements," Erdogan said at a news conference before departing on a trip to North Africa. "We will not give away anything to those who live arm-in-arm with terrorism."

"Many things have happened in this country, they've hanged, they've poisoned, but we will walk towards the future with determination and through holding onto our values," he added, an allusion to Turkey's murky past of military coups.
Turkey's leftist Public Workers Unions Confederation (KESK), which represents 240,000 members, said it would hold a "warning strike" on June 4-5 to protest over the crackdown on what had begun as peaceful protests.

The unrest delivered a blow to Turkish financial markets that have thrived under Erdogan. Shares fell more than 10 percent and the lira dropped to 16-month lows.  (VN:  Good, its about time, these idiots stupid actions cost them instead of just us. Its worth it to see them take a hit for a change, and a big one at that.)

Since taking office in 2002, Erdogan has dramatically cut back the power of the army, which ousted four governments in the second half of the 20th century and which hanged and jailed many, including a prime minister. In 1997 Turkey's first Islamist government was eased from office by the military.

Hundreds of officers, including top generals, as well as journalists and intellectuals have been jailed over an alleged coup plot against Erdogan. The wind of change has swept also through the judiciary. Where Erdogan was jailed in the late 1990s for promoting Islamism by reciting a poem, a musician was recently jailed for blasphemy after mocking religion in a tweet.



Erdogan said the protesters had no support in the population as a whole and dismissed any comparison with the 'Arab Spring' that swept nearby Arab states, toppling rulers long ensconced in power with the help of repressive security services.

His own tenure in office, with its economic and political reforms, was itself the "Turkish Spring", he suggested.

"Those in foreign media who talk about a Turkish Spring, we are already going through Turkish Spring, we have been living in it, and those who want to turn it into winter will not succeed."  (VN: Thank goodness this blog is international, since I get emails from many in Turkey who give an entirely different view of what is going on and it all centers around the Zionists running the Turkish government through Erdogan.  Repression is there, since emails were being interfreed with entering Turkey from the receiving end.) 

He gave no indication he was preparing any concessions to protesters who accuse him of fostering a hidden Islamist agenda in a country with a secularist constitution.

Some object to new restrictions on alcohol sales and other steps seen as religiously motivated. Others complain of the costs of Erdogan's support of rebels in neighbouring Syria's civil war. Still others bear economic grievances, viewing the disputed development project in Taksim Square as emblematic of wild greed among those who have benefited from Turkey's boom.

Walls around Taksim were plastered with cartoon posters of an image borrowed from a photograph, broadly disseminated on twitter, of a policeman spraying tear gas at a young woman in a red summer dress, her long hair swept upwards by the draught of the spraygun.

"The more they spray, the bigger we get," read the caption.

Western governments have promoted Erdogan's administration as a democratic Islamist model that could be copied elsewhere in the Middle East after the fall of authoritarian leaders. They have expressed concerns about human rights standards discreetly, but last weekend's events prompted the United States and the European Union to openly criticise police action.

Erdogan appeared to reject accusations of heavy handedness.
"We ... are behaving in a very restrained way," he said.

"Be calm, relax," he advised the public. "All this will be overcome."
"FUEL TO THE FIRE"

The protests had appeared to ease off on Saturday night, but were re-ignited by defiant comments by Erdogan on Sunday afternoon describing the protesters as "a few looters" driven on by the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP).
"Rather than try to calm the situation ... some of Mr Erdogan's public statements about the protesters have added fuel to the fire," Robert O'Daly, Turkey Analyst at The Economist Intelligence Unit, said. "Mr Erdogan appears to have underestimated the mood in the country."

There were signs some in the AK party did not back Erdogan's view that the troubles were promoted by the hardline secularist CHP.

"The people on the street across Turkey are not exclusively from the CHP, but from all ideologies and all parties," senior CHP member Mehmet Akif Hamzacebi told Reuters. "What Erdogan has to do is not to blame CHP but draw the necessary lessons from what happened."

With strong support, especially in the conservative religious heartland of Anatolia, Erdogan seems safe for now.

He said plans would go ahead to re-make Taksim Square, long a rallying point for demonstrations, including construction of a new mosque and the rebuilding of a replica Ottoman-era barracks.

Protests have involved a broad spectrum in dozens of cities, from students to professionals, trade unionists, Kurdish activists and hardline secularists who see Erdogan seeking to overthrow the secularist state set up by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923 in the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

Erdogan remains the most popular politician, and pointed to his electoral mandate, won since 2002 on the virtual ruin of traditional parties mired in corruption and mismanagement.

"The fact the AK Party has increased its votes at three elections in a row and has successfully won two referendums, shows how the people of this nation have embraced the AK Party," he said.

(Writing by Ralph Boulton; Editing by Nick Tattersall, Peter Graff and Giles Elgood)

The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

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