• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: 'Standing Man' goes viral, inspires silent protests in Turkey
  • Recommended: Derelict Northern Ireland shops get facelift ahead of G8 summit
  • Recommended: The Week in Pictures: June 6 - 13
  • Recommended: Booming population, rising seas threaten future of island nation

Conversations sparked by photojournalism. Follow us on Twitter to keep up-to-date.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 2
    days
    ago

    'Standing Man' goes viral, inspires silent protests in Turkey

    Vassil Donev / EPA

    Erdem Gunduz, center, stands on Taksim Square during a protest that was quickly dubbed "duranadam" or "standing man", in Istanbul, Turkey, early on June 18, 2013. Gunduz was briefly searched and questioned by police, media reports said.

    By Reuters

    A Turkish man has staged an eight-hour silent vigil on Istanbul's Taksim Square, scene of violent clashes between police and anti-government protesters in recent weeks, inspiring hundreds of others to follow his lead.

    Erdem Gunduz said he wanted to take a stand against police stopping demonstrations near the square, Dogan news agency reported.

    He stood silently, facing the Ataturk Cultural Center, which was draped in Turkish flags and a portrait of Turkey's founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, from 6 p.m. (11 a.m. ET) on Monday.

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    Erdem Gunduz stood for several hours unnoticed before his presence on the flashpoint square went viral on the social network Twitter. He was then joined by hundreds of others. Turkish police intervened, clearing the square and arresting several demonstrators.

    By 2 a.m. (7 p.m. ET), when the police moved in, about 300 people had joined him. Ten people who refused to be moved on by police were detained.

    Gunduz, swiftly dubbed "Standing Man" on social media in Turkey, inspired similar protests elsewhere in Istanbul as well as in the capital Ankara and the city of Izmir on the Aegean coast. Read the full story.

    Related: Woman in red sprayed with teargas becomes symbol of Turkey protests

    Marco Longari / AFP - Getty Images

    A man emulating Erdem Gunduz by standing on Taksim Square is arrested by police on June 18, 2013.

    Sedat Suna / EPA

    By Tuesday morning, others had begun to mimic Gunduz' protest in Taksim Square.

    Sedat Suna / EPA

    A protester stands on Taksim Square on June 18, 2013.

    Sedat Suna / EPA

    A protester reads a book (Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis") during a 'duranadam' protest in Istanbul on June 18, 2013.

    Sedat Suna / EPA

    Protesters stand on Taksim Square during a 'duranadam' protest on June 18, 2013.

    Slideshow: Anger in Turkey

    /

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Turkish demonstrators held a silent protest in Istanbul's Taksim Square, inspired by a man who staged an eight-hour silent vigil Monday. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    78 comments

    @stan berry - what an idiot you are. We have freedom of speech and have the right to protest peacefully. These people have been sprayed with water cannons, jailed, etc. Just standing there can get one arrested. Making fun of people in a country who probably have less rights than your pet is childish …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, europe, protest, world-news, istanbul, featured, taksim, standing-man, erdem-gunduz
  • 11
    Jun
    2013
    3:15pm, EDT

    Riot police storm Taksim Square as Turkey cracks down on protesters

    Lam Yik Fei / Getty Images

    Riot police fire tear gas to disperse the crowd during a demonstration near Taksim Square on June 11, in Istanbul, Turkey.

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    People run away as Turkish riot policemen fire tear gas on Taksim Square on June 11.

    Kostas Tsironis / AP

    A protester throws a petrol bomb towards riot police during clashes in Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on June 11, 2013.

    By Richard Engel and John Newland, NBC News

    Slideshow: Anger in Turkey

    Angelos Tzortzinis / AFP - Getty Images

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

     

    ISTANBUL – Hundreds of riot police clashed with protesters in Istanbul’s Taksim Square on Tuesday, as protests against the government of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan intensified.

    The latest violence began Tuesday morning when police moved past barriers erected by the protesters and into the square to scatter a small number of people who have been camped there to protest against a planned redevelopment of the square.

    Hundreds more protesters nearby - many wearing gas masks - joined to charge toward police, throwing Molotov cocktails and rocks. Police responded with round after round of tear gas canisters and frequent blasts from water cannons.

    Tourists fled hotels near the square, covering their mouths with napkins, as clouds of noxious gas spread over a large area downwind of the center of the protests. 

    Continue reading.

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    A protester is hit by water sprayed from a water cannon during clashes in Taksim Square, Istanbul, Turkey, on June 11, 2013.

     

    Tolga Bozoglu / EPA

    Turkish riot police remove protest flags from Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on June 11, 2013.

    Angelos Tzortzinis / AFP - Getty Images

    Protesters help one another during clashes with riot police in Istanbul's Taksim square on June 11, 2013. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he had "no more tolerance" for the mass anti-government demonstrations that have engulfed the country, as police clashed with demonstrators in Istanbul on a 12th day of unrest.

    Aris Messinis / AFP - Getty Images

    Protesters take cover behind a barricade as fireworks go off nearby during clashes between protesters and riot police in Taksim square in Istanbul on June 11, 2013.

    Kerim Okten / EPA

    A man extinguishes a fire on a GSM mobile antenna truck which was set on fire by protesters during clashes at Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on June 11.

    Related:

    • Photographer documents Istanbul 'war zone' in his own backyard on Facebook
    • The battle for Turkey in Taksim Square
    • 'Woman in red' sprayed with teargas becomes symbol of Turkey protests
    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    3 comments

    It seems Middle Eastern Dictators are getting nervous as the masses rally against their policies.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, world-news, instanbul, taksim-square
  • 7
    Jun
    2013
    6:36pm, EDT

    Photographer documents Istanbul 'war zone' in his own backyard on Facebook

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Part-time photographer Charles Emir Richards posted this and dozens of other photos from protests in Besiktas on June 2 on his Facebook page, with the message, "You don't need my permission to share the photos. I think it is especially important that people outside of Turkey share them to let it be known what is going on here."

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Taksim, Istanbul on June 4

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Besiktas, Istanbul on June 2

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Charles Emir Richards, an American living in Turkey, took to the streets of Taksim and Besiktas in Istanbul on June 1-4 not to join protesters, but to document the events between demonstrators and police in what he describes as a "war zone." The images in this blog post come from Richards’ Facebook page and are used with permission. NBC News’s Director of Photography, Jim Collins, contacted Richards via email to collect first-person reaction to his photos and the events that are occurring in his backyard.

    Do you live in Istanbul full-time and is the area where you’ve been shooting near to where you live?
    Yes, I do. I am half-Turkish and have been living here on and off for the past 15 years. Taksim is about a kilometer southeast from where I live. Akaretler, Besiktas a little less than a kilometer northeast. I am at a vortex of a triangle.

    Are you a photographer?
    I am a part-time photographer. It is my hobby gone crazy. I started shooting celebrity portraits for Rolling Stone over here and then, more recently, for Vogue and GQ. I don't take photographs as much as I should. Shooting the protests here for the past few days has convinced me that I was just wasting time, eating cake.

    Would you consider yourself a protester?
     I wish I was brave enough to be a protester, but I am not. I agree with what they are fighting for and felt it was important to document it.

    Are you concerned that the disturbances may threaten your home, property or safety in general?
    Right now it is impossible to say what is going to happen. The prime minister is not bending, nor are the protesters. Everyone is meeting again in Gezi Park tonight (Editor's note: Friday). If (Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip) Erdogan had made even minor concessions I think a lot of people were ready to declare a victory for democracy, and go home. Now I don't know, I think the weekend will tell what direction things will take.

    One thing I can say is that the protesters, even the most violent, have been extremely careful not to harm anyone's personal property. At any point they could have blocked the roads with private citizen's cars and burned them to block the police. They did not, and they did not entertain the idea of raiding or looting. If a store owner wanted to open shop and help they appreciated it, if not, fine.

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Taksim, Istanbul on June 4

    For my personal safety, I have very practical concerns, the top of the list being hyperventilating in my gas mask and it fogging up. Not seeing anything during a police raid is the worst thing I can imagine right now. I have been detained by the police twice already. I got shot twice by projectile gas canisters, which brought tears to my eyes, but is actually OK because adrenaline doesn't let you feel more than a sting until hours later. One girl I talked to (said) she was hit by a plastic bullet, and that it hurts so much that you can't move. I find that both very disturbing and threatening.

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Charles Emir Richards posted this image on his Facebook page on June 3 with the following comment: "The police brutally beat this man with a baton and shield. I don't know what happened to him as I was detained and released by the police soon after I took this photograph. Akaretler was a war zone tonight."

    What are the latest developments that you see on the streets there? Are the protests intensifying?
    Last night, the crowd was ready to greet the prime minister with a wave of hostility on his flight back from Tunisia. People were really keyed up where I was last night. There were professional protesters in the crowd from Palestine handing out double-sided photocopies of safety guidelines for gas attacks by the barricades. Everyone was on the lookout for police provocateurs in the crowd.

    The people at the barricades are growing in numbers and they are ready to fight. Inside Gezi Park, people are even more determined to continue peaceful protest.

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Charles Emir Richards posted this photo from Taskim, Istanbul on June 4 with the following comment: "The sad thing is that the evening started like this."

    There were reports of massive police movement all last night and rumors that police reinforcements were being bused in from other cities. Despite this, I never saw a single officer the entire night.

    What have you been doing with your photographs besides posting them to Facebook?
    Nothing. I have been posting them on Facebook as it has been the only means to get the word out about what is going on here recently. The news media here went blank on the issue, that's when I thought I should go out and shoot and post on Facebook, I felt that a document should get out from somewhere, anywhere. Until yesterday, the local media pretended that nothing was going on. On June 2, when everyone was on the streets engaging the police, CNN Turk was broadcasting a documentary about penguins.

    People went and protested in front of media buildings and pasted money on their walls and doors saying if you love money that much here it is, now do your jobs. Even after that they are reporting a very light version of the protests.

    Editor's Note: This interview has been edited and condensed.

    Charles Emir Richards via Facebook

    Besiktas, Istanbul on June 1

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    15 comments

    This makes me very sad. I visited Istanbul in 1976 and fell in love with the city and with the Turks. They are very hospitable and kind people who are caught up in the growing incivility in the Middle East and the slow-motion collapse of the world economy. The Prime Minister is no doubt extremely st …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, world-news, istanbul, facebook, besiktas, taskim
  • 6
    Jun
    2013
    2:03pm, EDT

    The battle for Turkey in Taksim Square

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    A protester holds a portrait of Turkish Republic founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, on the way between Besiktas and Taksim in Istanbul, early on June 6. Thousands of striking workers took to the streets of Turkey's cities, loudly joining calls for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to step down as mass protests against his rule intensified.

    Gurcan Ozturk / AFP - Getty Images

    Protesters chant slogans at Taksim Square in Istanbul on June 5 as part of ongoing protests against the ruling party, police brutality, and the destruction of Taksim park for a development project.

    Slideshow: Clashes in Turkey

    Kostas Tsironis / AP

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     Related content:

    • Taksim Square and the battle for Turkey – What's next?
    • 'Woman in red' sprayed with teargas becomes symbol of Turkey protests
    • Outcry against development snowballs into widespread protest against the Turkish government

     

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, world-news, istanbul, taksim
  • 4
    Jun
    2013
    5:01am, EDT

    'Woman in red' sprayed with teargas becomes symbol of Turkey protests

    Osman Orsal / Reuters file

    A sequence of photos shows riot police using tear gas against an unidentified woman in Istanbul's Taksim Square on May 28.

    By Alexandra Hudson, Reuters

    ISTANBUL - In her red cotton summer dress, necklace and white bag slung over her shoulder she might have been floating across the lawn at a garden party; but before her crouches a masked policeman firing teargas spray that sends her long hair billowing upwards.

    Endlessly shared on social media and replicated as a cartoon on posters and stickers, the image of the "woman in red" has become the leitmotif for female protesters during days of violent anti-government demonstrations in Istanbul.

    "That photo encapsulates the essence of this protest," said math student Esra at Besiktas, near the Bosphorus strait and one of the centres of this week's protests. "The violence of the police against peaceful protesters, people just trying to protect themselves and what they value."

    In one graphic copy plastered on walls the woman appears much bigger than the policeman. "The more you spray the bigger we get" reads the slogan next to it.

    Hundreds of protesters have clashed with police across Turkey, with at least one fatality. The dissent has rapidly spread into a mass protest against the Prime Minister Tayyip Erdgoan, who blamed the violence on extremists and rejected any comparison with the Arab Spring. Channel 4's International Editor Lindsey Hilsum reports.

    The United States and the European Union as well as human rights groups have expressed concern about the heavy-handed action of Turkish police against protesters.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan branded the protesters on Monday extremists "living arm in arm with terrorism," a description that seems to sit ill with the image of the woman in red.

    There were others dressed in more combative gear and sporting face masks as they threw stones, but the large number of very young women in Besiktas and on Taksim Square where the protests began on Friday evening is notable.

    With swimming goggles and flimsy surgical masks against the teargas, light tasseled scarves hanging around their necks, Esra, Hasine and Secil stood apprehensively in the Besiktas district on Monday evening, joined by ever growing numbers of youngsters as dusk fell and the mood grew more sombre.

    They belong, as perhaps does the woman in red, to the ranks of young, articulate women who believe they have something to lose in Erdogan's Turkey. They feel threatened by his promotion of the Islamic headscarf, symbol of female piety.

    Slideshow: Clashes in Turkey

    Stringer / AFP - Getty Images

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

    Many of the women point to new abortion laws as a sign that Erdogan, who has advised Turkish women to each have three children, wants to roll back women's rights and push them into traditional, pious roles.

    "I respect women who wear the headscarf, that is their right, but İ also want my rights to be protected," said Esra. "I'm not a leftist or an anti-capitalist. İ want to be a business woman and live in a free Turkey."

    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of the secular republic formed in 1923 from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire, encouraged women to wear Western clothes rather than headscarves and promoted the image of the professional woman. Ironically, Erdogan is seen these days as, for better or worse, the most dominant Turkish leader since Ataturk.

    Erdogan was first swept to power in 2002 and remains unrivalled in popularity, drawing on strong support in the conservative Anatolian heartland.

    The weekend demonstrations in dozens of cities suggest however his popularity may be dwindling, at least among middle classes who swung behind him in the early years of political and economic reform that cut back the power of the army and introduced some rights amendments.

    Aris Messinis / AFP - Getty Images

    A couple wearing gas masks walk at a street in Istanbul on Tuesday as the demonstrations continue.

    "Erdogan says 50 percent of the people voted for him. I'm here to show I belong to the other 50 percent, the half of the population whose feelings he showed no respect for, the ones he is trying to crush," said chemistry student Hasine.

    "I want to have a future here in Turkey, a career, a freedom to live my life. But all these are under threat. I want Erdogan to understand," she added.

    Erdogan, a pious man who denies Islamist ambitions for Turkey, rejects any suggestion he wants to cajole anyone into religious observance. He says new alcohol laws, also denounced by the women, have been passed to protect health rather than on religious grounds.

    Protesters are coming better prepared now than when the unrest first began. Some have hard-hats, some are dressed all in black, most wear running shoes. But many are dressed as femininely as the girl in the red dress snapped on Taksim Square.

    "Of course I'm nervous and I know I could be in danger here. But for me that is nothing compared to the danger of losing the Turkish Republic, its freedoms and spirit," said 23 year-old economics student Busra, who says her parents support her protest.

    Related stories:

    • Riots are making Turkey too dangerous - says war-torn Syria
    • Tear gas, pepper spray fired at youths as thousands riot in Turkey

    210 comments

    Now if she could have sprayed back and let it end in a tie. Was her Glock in her other purse? Wear a head scarf? Go back to being some mans property, I think NOT!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protests, istanbul, featured, tayyip-erdogan
  • 3
    Jun
    2013
    4:00pm, EDT

    Outcry against development snowballs into widespread protest against the Turkish government

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    Protestors clash with Turkish riot police in Istanbul, June 3, 2013, during a demonstration against the demolition of a park. Turkish police began pulling out of Istanbul's iconic Taksim Square after a second day of violent clashes between protesters and police over a controversial development project.

    NBC News reports

    In Istanbul, hundreds of young men and women gathered on Ä°stiklal Avenue, one of the city's main streets, early Monday. The crowds, which clapped and whistled as they headed toward the city's main Taksim Square, were smaller than those seen over the weekend.

    The recent unrest in Turkey broke out when trees were torn down at a park in Taksim as part of government plans to develop the area.  The demonstrations have broadened into a show of defiance against the Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP).

    Ozan Kose / AFP - Getty Images

    Men try to stop a police car from burning at Taksim Square in Istanbul, June 3, during protests against the Islamic-rooted government. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday rejected talk of a "Turkish Spring", shrugging off mass protests against his government.

    Slideshow: Clashes in Turkey

    AFP - Getty Images

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, demonstration, world-news
  • 31
    May
    2013
    1:51pm, EDT

    Turks angry with demolition of beloved park faceoff with riot police

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators help one another as Turkish riot policemen use tear gas to disperse clashes on May 31, 2013 during a protest against the demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, in Taksim Square in Istanbul. Police reportedly used tear gas to disperse a group, who were standing guard in Gezi Parki to prevent the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality from demolishing the last remaining green public space in the center of Istanbul as a part of a major Taksim renewal project. At least a dozen people were injured.

    Ozan Kose / AFP - Getty Images

    Protestors hold a giant Turkish flag in front of a water cannon truck on May 31, 2013 during a protest against the demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, in Taksim Square in Istanbul.

    Sedat Suna / EPA

    Turkish riot police use water cannons to disperse demonstrators during a protest against the planned construction of a new shopping mall at Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on May 31, 2013. Protesting under the slogan 'OccupyGezi,' activists have been staging a demonstration since May 28 to save Taksim Square.

    By Nick Tattersall and Humeyra Pamuk, Reuters

    ISTANBUL/ANKARA - Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan made a defiant call for an end to the fiercest anti-government demonstrations in years on Saturday, as thousands of protesters clashed with riot police in Istanbul and Ankara for a second day. 

    The unrest was triggered by government plans for a replica Ottoman-era barracks housing shops or apartments in Istanbul's Taksim Square, long a venue for political protest, but has widened into a broader show of defiance against Erdogan and his Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP). 

    Police fired teargas and water cannon down a major shopping street as crowds of protesters chanting "shoulder to shoulder against fascism" and "government resign" marched towards Taksim, where hundreds were injured in clashes on Friday. 

    A police helicopter buzzed overhead as groups of mostly young men and women, bandanas or surgical masks tied around their mouths, used Facebook and Twitter on mobile phones to try to organize and regroup in side streets. 

    "If this is about holding meetings, if this is a social movement, where they gather 20, I will get up and gather 200,000 people. Where they gather 100,000, I will bring together one million from my party," Erdogan said in a televised speech. 

    "Every four years we hold elections and this nation makes its choice ... Those who have a problem with government's policies can express their opinions within the framework of law and democracy," he said. 

    Police later pulled back from Gezi Park in Taksim, where the demonstration started peacefully on Monday with people pitching tents in protest at trees being torn up for the redevelopment. 

    Waiters scurried out of luxury hotels lining the square, on what should be a busy weekend for tourists in one of the world's most visited cities, ferrying lemons to protesters, who squirted the juice in their eyes to mitigate the effects of tear gas. 

    "People from different backgrounds are coming together. This has become a protest against the government, against Erdogan taking decisions like a king," said Oral Goktas, a 31-year old architect among a peaceful crowd walking towards Taksim. 

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    Turkish riot policemen use tear gas to disperse clashes on May 31, 2013 during a protest against the demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, in Taksim Square in Istanbul.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Demonstrators flee from a water cannon during clashes with riot police on May 31, 2013 during a protest against the demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, in Taksim Square in Istanbul.

    Ozan Kose / AFP - Getty Images

    A wounded woman lays on Taksim Square after clashes with riot police on May 31, 2013 during a protest against the demolition of Taksim Gezi Park, in Taksim Square in Istanbul. Protesters tried to prevent the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality from demolishing the last remaining green public space in the center of Istanbul as a part of a major Taksim renewal project.

    Stone-throwing protesters also clashed with police in the Kizilay district of central Ankara as a helicopter fired tear gas into the crowds. Riot police with electric shock batons chased demonstrators into side streets and shops. 

    Protests also broke out in the Aegean coastal city of Izmir late on Friday. 

    Erdogan said the redevelopment of Gezi Park was being used as an excuse for the unrest and warned the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), which had been given permission to hold a rally in Istanbul, against stoking tensions. 

    But the protests included a broad spectrum of people opposed to Erdogan and were not organized by any political party. 

    CHP officials called on its members not to take party flags with them to the protests, apparently concerned they would be held responsible for the violence, and party leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu accused Erdogan of behaving like a dictator. 

    AP

    A man wearing a make-shift gas-mask hours before riot police use tear gas and pressurized water to quash a peaceful demonstration by hundreds of people staging a sit-in protest to try and prevent the demolition of trees at an Istanbul park, Turkey, on May 30.

    "Tens of thousands are saying no, they are opposing the dictator ... The fact that you are the ruling party doesn't mean you can do whatever you want," he said. 

    Erdogan has overseen a transformation in Turkey during his decade in power, turning its once crisis-prone economy into the fastest-growing in Europe. 

    He remains by far the country's most popular politician, but critics point to what they see as his authoritarianism and the religiously conservative government's meddling in private life in the secular republic, accusing him of behaving like a modern-day sultan. 

    Tighter restrictions on alcohol sales and warnings against public displays of affection in recent weeks have also led to protests. Concern that government policy is allowing Turkey to be dragged into the conflict in neighboring Syria by the West has also sparked peaceful demonstrations. 

    Tolga Bozoglu / EPA

    Turkish riot police use tear gas to disperse demonstrators during a protest against the planned construction of a new shopping mall at Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on May 31, 2013. Protesting under the slogan 'OccupyGezi', activists have been staging a demonstration since 28 May to save Taksim Square.

    Tolga Bozoglu / EPA

    Turkish riot police use water cannons to disperse demonstrators during a protest against the planned construction of a new shopping mall at Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, on May 31, 2013. Protesting under the slogan 'OccupyGezi', activists have been staging a demonstration since May 28 to save Taksim Square.

    AP

    People during hold a sit-in protest to try and prevent the demolition of trees at an Istanbul park, Turkey, on May 30. Police moved in at dawn Friday to disperse the crowd on the fourth day of the protest against a contentious government plan to revamp Istanbul's main square, Taksim, injuring a number of protesters. The protesters are demanding that the square's park, Gezi, is protected.

    Slideshow: Clashes in Turkey

    AFP - Getty Images

    Protests that started as an outcry against a local development project in Taksim Square have snowballed into widespread anger against what critics say is the government's increasingly conservative and authoritarian agenda.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    14 comments

    this seems to be the first comment made here from Turkey... first of all, the coverage is wonderful, accept missing the part that the riots had spread to around 15 other cities... those who are so deranged to believe that these pictures were staged and the protests were done by hippies, I assure  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, world-news, istanbul, featured
  • 14
    May
    2013
    7:37pm, EDT

    Death toll of weekend bombing in Turkey reaches 50

    Umit Bektas / Reuters

    The mother of 22-year-old Ayten Calim mourns during her funeral in the town of Reyhanli in Hatay province, Turkey, near the Turkish-Syrian border on May 14. Calim was one of around 50 people to have been killed by two bomb attacks in Reyhanli over the weekend.

    By Nick Tattersall, Reuters

    Turkey's prime minister will push President Barack Obama for more assertive action on Syria during a visit to Washington this week, days after car bombs tore through a Turkish border town in the deadliest spillover of violence yet.

    The bombings in Reyhanli, which killed 50 people on Saturday, and activists' reports of a massacre of Sunni Muslims in a Syrian coastal town have incensed Tayyip Erdogan, already critical of the slow international response to the conflict. Read the full story.

     

    Umit Bektas / Reuters

    Relatives cover the body of 22-year-old Ayten Calim with a Muslim prayer rug and her wedding dress as they lower her into a grave in the town of Reyhanli in Hatay province, Turkey, near the Turkish-Syrian border on May 14.

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    People stand in a damaged building on May 14, at Reyhanli in Hatay, Turkey, just a few miles from the main border crossing into Syria. The death toll in twin car bombings in a Turkish town near the Syrian border has increased to 50 after another body was recovered and a victim died in hospital, the health minister was quoted as saying on May 14. The attacks also provoked a backlash against the nearly 400,000 Syrian refugees in Turkey. Government officials have repeatedly warned against provocations and said Turkey will maintain its open-door policy for Syrians fleeing the regime's crackdown.

    Bulent Kilic / AFP - Getty Images

    A man works in a damaged building on May 14 at Reyhanli in Hatay, Turkey, just a few miles from the main border crossing into Syria.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Reuters

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    1 comment

    The religion of peace. If they don't have imperialist Americans to blow up they'll blow up each other.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, explosion, syria, bombing, conflict, world-news
  • 13
    Dec
    2012
    11:54am, EST

    Police, protesters collide outside courthouse near Istanbul

    AP

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Police push back hundreds of protesters trying to enter a courthouse where prosecutors are scheduled to deliver final arguments in the case against hundreds of people accused of plotting to overturn the Islamic-leaning government, in Silivri near Istanbul on Thursday.

    A verdict in the four-year long case involving 275 defendants, including Turkey's former military chief Ilker Basbug and other army officers as well as lawyers, academics and journalists, is expected in the coming weeks. The defendants face dozens of charges, ranging from membership in an underground "terrorist organisation" to instigating an armed uprising against the Justice and Development Party which came to power in 2002.

    AFP - Getty Images

    Sign up for the NBC News Photos Newsletter

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, protest, world-news, istanbul, silivri
  • 11
    Dec
    2012
    6:59pm, EST

    Winter brings more troubles for displaced Syrians

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Girls who fled their homes with their families peek out of their makeshift school at a camp for displaced Syrians in the village of Atmeh, Syria, Dec. 10, 2012.

    ATMEH, Syria (AP) — This tent camp sheltering Syrians uprooted by their country's brutal civil war has lost the race against winter: The ground under white tents is soaked in mud, fights erupt over scarce blankets and volunteer doctors routinely run out of medicine for coughing, runny-nosed children.

    The 21-month-old battle to bring down President Bashar Assad has already forced some 3 million Syrians from their homes, according to a new estimate, and cold, wet winter weather is making life increasingly unbearable for the displaced.

    Many of the roughly 12,000 people seeking refuge in the tent camp near the Syrian village of Atmeh on the Turkish border fled with just the clothes on their backs, running from intensifying bombing raids by the Syrian air force in recent months. Full story…

    EDITOR’S NOTE: all images made available to NBC News on Dec. 11.

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Children gather around a vehicle to get pillows and blankets distributed at a camp for displaced Syrians, in the village of Atmeh, Syria, Dec. 10.

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Children stand at a camp for displaced Syrians in the village of Atmeh, Syria, Dec. 11.

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    A woman cooks for her family outside her tent at a camp for displaced Syrians in the village of Atmeh, Syria, Dec. 11.

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    A boy walks back to his tent at a camp for displaced Syrians, in the village of Atmeh, Syria, Dec. 10.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    1 comment

    "The 21-month-old battle to bring down President Bashar Assad has already forced some 3 million Syrians from their homes, according to a new estimate, and cold, wet winter weather is making life increasingly unbearable for the displaced." Sunnis fast backward march to one-way traffic and high level  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, syria, refugee, world-news, atmeh
  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    7:48am, EST

    Turkey scrambles jets as Syrian government forces bomb border town

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Syrians cross the border from the Syrian town of Ras al-Ain to the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar after an air strike on December 3, 2012.

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Syrians run for cover as smoke rises over Ras al-Ain after an air strike, as seen from the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar on December 3, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Syrian government forces bombed rebel positions in the frontier town of Ras al-Ain on Monday, killing at least 12 people according to opposition activists, and prompting Turkey to scramble fighter jets along the border.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said six of those killed by the air raids on the town's Mahatta neighborhood were rebel fighters and that 30 people were wounded.

    Report: Syrian rebels clash with Lebanon troops on border

    Heavy bursts of anti-aircraft fire shook the Turkish town of Ceylanpinar, which abuts Ras al-Ain, sending residents fleeing for cover. Columns of smoke rose up from the Syrian side and ambulances rushed the wounded to hospital. Read the full story.

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Syrians try to cross the border from Ras al-Ain to the Turkish border town of Ceylanpinar after an air strike on December 3, 2012.

    More photos from Syria on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Osman Orsal / Reuters

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

     

    11 comments

    It would be great to see the Arab League step up to the plate and solve their own regional problem. They have the money, equipment, soldiers, but no guts.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, middle-east, refugees, border, syria, conflict, world-news
  • 21
    Nov
    2012
    4:15pm, EST

    Cobbler lives! Obama gives a turkey something to be thankful for

    Alex Wong / Getty Images

    President Barack Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia, right, with Cobbler the turkey at the White House on Wednesday.

    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    Cobbler is seen before being pardoned by President Obama at the White House.

    AP reports: President Barack Obama pardoned two turkeys in an annual Thanksgiving rite on Wednesday, saying he wanted to offer the birds a second chance.

    "They say life is full of second chances, and this November I couldn't agree more with that sentiment," a smiling Obama said in one of several lighthearted references to his re-election this month to a second term.

    Cobbler, the newly designated national turkey, and his alternate, Gobbler, received a reprieve. Full Story

    The tradition of pardoning a Thanksgiving turkey at the White House started with President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

     Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter


    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    President Obama waves his hand as he pardons Cobbler. At left is National Turkey Federation Chairman Steve Willardsen.

     

    4 comments

    It's nice to see the president happily protecting the life of a turkey. If only he could have done the same with the Americans in Benghazi.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: turkey, white-house, barack-obama, us-news, pardon
Older posts

Browse

  • world-news,
  • us-news,
  • featured,
  • weather,
  • sports,
  • protest,
  • politics,
  • asia,
  • india,
  • china,
  • europe,
  • space,
  • religion,
  • afghanistan,
  • middle-east,
  • environment,
  • germany,
  • travel,
  • london,
  • military,
  • animal-tracks,
  • tech-science,
  • jwoods,
  • fire,
  • japan,
  • south-asia,
  • conflict,
  • new-york,
  • russia,
  • israel,
  • pakistan,
  • cosmic-log,
  • snow,
  • egypt,
  • animals,
  • images,
  • spain,
  • business,
  • entertainment,
  • africa,
  • england,
  • earthquake,
  • flood,
  • economy,
  • libya,
  • syria,
  • winter
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Jon Sweeney, NBC News

Multimedia producer for NBC News, father of three, and newly transplanted to New York City.

Archives

  • 2013
    • June (88)
    • May (142)
    • April (172)
    • March (186)
    • February (195)
    • January (251)
  • 2012
    • December (262)
    • November (281)
    • October (371)
    • September (319)
    • August (406)
    • July (387)
    • June (386)
    • May (422)
    • April (425)
    • March (458)
    • February (451)
    • January (502)
  • 2011
    • December (452)
    • November (464)
    • October (441)
    • September (409)
    • August (507)
    • July (439)
    • June (456)
    • May (443)
    • April (403)
    • March (421)
    • February (508)
    • January (651)
  • 2010
    • December (634)
    • November (360)
    • October (188)
    • September (159)
    • August (110)
    • July (89)
    • June (146)
    • May (89)
    • April (71)
    • March (46)
    • February (43)
    • January (54)
  • 2009
    • December (54)
    • November (46)
    • October (36)
    • September (40)
    • August (31)
    • July (39)
    • June (32)
    • May (57)
    • April (41)
    • March (38)
    • February (44)
    • January (45)
  • 2008
    • December (72)
    • November (38)
    • October (40)
    • September (40)
    • August (75)
    • July (36)
    • June (37)
    • May (44)
    • April (34)
    • March (52)
    • February (45)
    • January (26)
  • 2007
    • December (36)
    • November (32)
    • October (72)
    • September (60)
    • August (40)
    • July (23)
    • June (25)
    • May (31)
    • April (43)
    • March (38)
    • February (35)
    • January (47)
  • 2006
    • December (64)
    • November (77)
  • 2000
    • October (1)

Most Commented

  • Photographer documents subway construction nine stories below Manhattan (101)
  • 'Standing Man' goes viral, inspires silent protests in Turkey (78)
  • Derelict Northern Ireland shops get facelift ahead of G8 summit (53)
  • Michelle Obama and her daughters visit Berlin Wall, Holocaust memorial (124)
  • Protesters embrace to protect each other from tear gas as Brazil bus fare demo turns ugly (21)
  • Booming population, rising seas threaten future of island nation (18)
  • Chilly body language on display as Presidents Obama and Putin meet at the G-8 (7)

Other blogs

  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • News photos on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise