Turkey’s Kurds in uproar over election vetoes

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DIYARBAKIR – Kurdish crowds clashed with riot police in street demonstrations Tuesday after Turkey’s electoral board barred prominent Kurdish candidates from standing in upcoming elections. About 3,000 people gathered in Diyarbakir, the largest city of the mainly Kurdish southeast, to protest the controversial ruling of the Higher Electoral Board (YSK), pelting the police with stones and fireworks.
The security forces used tear gas and water cannons to disperse the crowd and detained at least five people, an AFP reporter said. “Our political will cannot be stifled,” the protestors shouted, also chanting slogans praising the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged a bloody campaign for self-rule in the southeast since 1984.
Similar unrest erupted in the eastern city of Van when the security forces stopped a crowd from marching on the local electoral office, Anatolia news agency reported. The protestors hurled petrol bombs at the police and on public buildings and banks, sparking small fires, Anatolia said, adding that two policemen were injured when their car hit a barricade set by the demonstrators. In Istanbul, some 3,000 people staged a sit-in on Taksim Square, disrupting traffic in the heart of the city for more than an hour.