Sunday, June 16, 2013
Turkey
Sunday, June 16, 2013 by DXTR corporation
From Turkey, with pride
Join the conversation
By Sarah Brown, CNN
June 7, 2013 -- Updated 1707 GMT (0107 HKT)
Görkem Keser also shot this photo of a police officer amid protests in Istanbul last Friday.
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On the front line in Turkey's protests
- More than 1,000 submissions flooded CNN iReport over the Turkey protests
- Many posts took the form of open letters from protesters keen for their voice to be heard
- Social media for protesters became a method of documenting and raising awareness
Did you witness the protests? Send us your images and video but stay safe.
(CNN) -- "Dear World: My fingers and wrists are
sore, for the past few days all I could do was punch the letters on the
keyboard ... "
These were the words of one Turkish man in Africa who spent days scouring the Internet for news on the Turkish protests that he could share.
People from all over
Turkey and beyond poured out their feelings after what some say has been
a heavy-handed police response to protests in Turkey.
CNN alone received more
than 1,000 iReports from Turkey in less than a week from Turks compelled
to document, protest and demand their voices be heard.
The protests began over
plans to replace an Istanbul park with a new development, but spread
nationwide after a heavy-handed crackdown by police.
Erdogan has defended his
government's handling of the protests, saying Friday that the government
has "no problem in terms of democratic demands." He also acknowledged,
again, that police may have used excessive force last week, and said he
had ordered an investigation.
Turkey's media in crisis
Tensions rise in Antakya
The changing tone of Turkish protests
Turkey's economic outlook
Inspiring the protesters in Turkey
"To the Rest of the
World: This is the first time in my 30 years that tears well up for what
is happening just up the road from where I write these words. ...
"People from all ages and
races, all political viewpoints are coming together to fight. Notify
your local and national media, and tag them on twitter to make them
speak the truth about what is happening. This is ... for humanity, no
less," wrote iReporter "ateloco" in a post that spread rapidly through social media.
Turkey as a nation is
quite savvy about social media. At least 2 million tweets with hashtags
related to the Turkish protests were sent in just eight hours on May 31
when protests gathered steam, a study by New York University revealed --
around 90% of them from Turkey. In comparison, Egypt's main protest
hashtag was tweeted less than 1 million times throughout the country's
entire revolutionary period.
And those in Turkey like
to talk on the issues -- 57% of those using social network sites say
they do so to share their political views -- a far higher percentage
than in many European nations, according to the Pew Research Center.
The arrest this week of
25 social media users on accusations of spreading false information
about demonstrations, according to the country's semi-official Anadolu
Agency news service, has sparked concerns from human rights groups about
the right of freedom of expression.
But while documenting
and disseminating information on the protests can be an arduous task,
for many on social media it became a way of holding authorities to
account.
"I don't know when it
will end, but I already feel like a robot whose main role is to click
the share button on Facebook," one activist, Istanbul resident Yelin
Bilgin, told CNN after days of protests.
She described the protests as her moment of "resurrection." Although she wasn't involved in organizing them, she felt she could help the cause by sharing information.
She wants the protests
to lead to more self-examination on all sides. "We shouldn't stop, but
we should act more consciously. We have to write, we have to share our
thoughts."
Renc Korzay is not
currently living in his homeland, but working for a construction company
in the West African nation of Gabon. His heartfelt letter on iReport opened this story and continues:
"I was guilty for
letting my friends get gassed and arrested in the name of freedom
without me. I was guilty for not being able to keep my colleagues
company as they march to Taksim Square straight off work. I was guilty
for not being able to give the people my apartment to shelter, my food
to eat, my water to drink and my vinegar to ease off the reaction from
the chemicals sprayed on their bodies."
He hoped that by writing
and collecting information -- even from far away -- he could be of some
help. "I was no longer in Africa and I was no longer guilty. I became a
reporter with quotes, cameraman with videos, photographer with images, a
24-hour news channel with everything I posted on social media," he
said.
Istanbul writer Arsevi
Zeynep Seyran was in the western coastal city of Izmir when protests
began. Describing herself as a "pot and pan hitter" after the noisy
protests she recorded one night, her thoughtful essay summed up the energy of the protests for many.
If people are silent
about the what is happening in Turkey, the protesters "are afraid that
as a society things will go backward," she said.
By shining a spotlight
on the situation in the country, she hoped authorities would be less
likely to retaliate against those involved in the protests, she said.
Ultimately, it may be
too soon to tell what effect the protests will have on Turkey, its
government and those who flooded the streets of Istanbul, Ankara and
other cities. But one thing is certain; those who have been feverishly
tweeting, posting, blogging and documenting will not be inclined to stop
any time soon.
"For the first time in a long time," Seyran said, "Turkey has much reason for pride."
SOURCE:Cnn News Iternational (www.cnn.com)
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