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Press
Releases
11/20/06
Turkish
leftists storm Associated Press office; police arrest 29 demonstrators
ANKARA, Turkey (AP)
-- Police arrested 29 leftist activists who broke into The
Associated Press office in the capital Monday to protest alleged
mistreatment of prisoners in Turkey, authorities said. There
were no injuries.
Riot police in gas masks hammered open the office door and
sprayed tear gas to evict the protesters, who had occupied
the bureau in a residential apartment building in downtown
Ankara for about two hours. The demonstrators had refused
to let several AP employees leave the office, but they were
unharmed in the police raid.
"We are happy no one was hurt," said AP International
Editor John Daniszewski. "We strongly protest this incident
and we believe that journalists should be allowed to do their
work without interference."
Shortly before police swarmed into the office, protesters
coughed and leaned out of the windows to escape the effects
of the gas. They had unfurled banners from the windows but
were unable to secure a live interview on Turkish television
as demanded as part of their efforts to publicize their cause.
The activists belong to TAYAD, a group whose Turkish initials
stand for The Association of Solidarity with the Families
of Prisoners.
The group often stages demonstrations against alleged torture
and other mistreatment of prisoners in Turkey. It says it
was formed after a military coup in 1980 as a voice for prisoners'
rights, and claims that more than 100 prisoners have died
in riots or hunger strikes in high-security prisons in the
past decade.
TAYAD has campaigned on behalf of families of jailed members
of the Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front, or DHKP-C,
a banned Marxist group. The DHKP-C, which is leading the strike,
has claimed responsibility for a number of assassinations
and bombings since the 1970s.
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