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No Red-Carpet Reception: Turkish Premier's Election Campaign Met Wit

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  • No Red-Carpet Reception: Turkish Premier's Election Campaign Met Wit

    NO RED-CARPET RECEPTION: TURKISH PREMIER'S ELECTION CAMPAIGN MET WITH ROCKS IN HAMSHEN-POPULATED AREA
    By Gayane Abrahamyan

    ArmeniaNow
    02.06.11 | 14:30

    On Tuesday Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's election
    campaign met with anti-government banners and rock-hurling
    demonstrators at Hopa, a location populated by some 20,000 Hamshen
    Armenians.

    The clashes in which Erdogan himself was unscathed left at least
    one protester dead and several people, including one of the prime
    minister's bodyguards, injured.

    Hamshens are Islamized Armenians, who mainly live in the Black Sea
    coastal town of Hopa and nearby Borcka in Turkey's northeastern Artvin
    province. Their total number in Turkey is about 50-60,000.

    Prominent Hamshen community member Ismet Sahin, who had originally
    been included in the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP)
    list for this month's parliamentary elections, but eventually was
    omitted from the party slate, says Erdogan had been warned about a
    possible hostile reception in advance.

    "Erdogan knew very well how he would be received here, and also in
    Diyarbakir, where he went today, but he has insisted on coming... We
    want to have a representative of our rights in parliament, but they
    do not tolerate it, they are not ready for that yet," Sahin tells
    ArmeniaNow.

    Sahin says Erdogan came to Hopa with a large number of supporters who
    were to attend a rally. That circumstance "even more angered local
    residents who oppose his party and his policies towards minorities."

    According to the Turkish Hurriyet newspaper, a group of demonstrators
    in the town hung a huge banner, reading "Erdogan, get out of Hopa",
    on a building overseeing the square where the prime minister would hold
    his rally. They also reportedly hurled rocks at an Erdogan motorcade.

    Police reportedly had to use water cannons and tear gas to disperse
    the crowd, which resulted in one demonstrator collapsing. The man,
    identified by Hurriyet as a retired teacher, later died in the hospital
    due to a heart attack. The paper also reports that nine people were
    wounded and six others were overcome by pepper gas sprayed by the
    police during the clashes.

    Parliamentary elections in Turkey are scheduled for June 12.

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