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Turkey arrests at least 15 protesters at Pride rally


A demonstrator gestures as he holds a flag during the LGBT Pride Parade in the Kadikoy district to celebrate the Pride Month in Istanbul, June 30, 2024. Turkish police detained at least 15 protesters in Istanbul on Sunday for participating in the rally.
A demonstrator gestures as he holds a flag during the LGBT Pride Parade in the Kadikoy district to celebrate the Pride Month in Istanbul, June 30, 2024. Turkish police detained at least 15 protesters in Istanbul on Sunday for participating in the rally.

Turkish police detained at least 15 protesters in Istanbul on Sunday for participating at a banned LGBTQ+ Pride rally, after searching the streets having arrived at the scene after participants had dispersed, a Reuters witness said.

Police declined to comment.

The Istanbul Governor's Office said earlier Sunday that the Pride March would not be permitted. Turkish police blocked central Istanbul to prevent the march from taking place, shutting down metro stations and blocking traffic on the main streets.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Islamic-rooted AK Party has toughened its rhetoric against the LGBTQ+ community over the past decade and banned Pride marches since 2015, citing “security reasons.”

The Istanbul Governor's Office labelled the organizations calling for the Pride March as illegal.

Following the ban, LGBTQ+ groups gathered in another part of Istanbul on the Asian side, with a representative reading a statement that said: "We never get tired of deceiving the police and forcing them to deal with us."

"You have closed all the streets and squares, you have stopped the life of a whole city, but you have forgotten that we will pierce the stone and find each other if necessary."

Police officers searched the streets for protesters and detained at least 15 people, the Reuters witness said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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