Güncelleme Tarihi:
Police wearing gas masks first broke up a crowd which had gathered in front of the DISK office in
The Turkish government had insisted on its rejection to lift the decades-long ban and open Taksim for celebrations, citing security concerns, taking extra ordinary security measures stationing thousands of police across the city. Â Â
In the days leading up to the May Day celebrations,
Police, blocking all the streets leading to Taksim, broke up groups of workers trying to enter the square through various alternative routes, firing tear gas and beating some demonstrators with clubs.
Some demonstrators were seen throwing rocks at police. Journalists and people trying to get to work were also affected by the tear gas fired at the demonstrators.
The unions ended the march in the Sisli district of Istanbul stating that they did not want to be seen as the government’s provocation mechanism.
Labor Unions Confederation (DISK) Chairman Suleyman Celebi said that together with Confederation of Public Sector Unions (KESK) Chairman Ismail Hakki Tombul and Turkish Confederation of Labor (Turk-Is) Secretary General Mustafa Turkel, they decided not to push workers towards Taksim Square for a colossal meeting.         Â
"Now we are ending the celebrations with common sense, because we don’t want to be seen as the government’s provocation mechanism," Celebi told reporters on Thursday. "We wanted to gather in Taksim (square) to express our demands with an enthusiastic festival. Now, all squares and the whole
However, Tombul told ANKA that nearly 900 union members had been detained during the demonstrations. Â
A group of demonstrators later made their way to Taksim’s
Brief scuffles erupted between police and a group from the leftist Freedom and Solidarity Party (ODP) during the mostly peaceful May Day celebrations in the capital
DISK last year attempted to breach the ban and hold celebrations in Taksim. But clashes erupted between the demonstrators and police forces, wounding tens of people. Some 1,000 people were taken into custody in 2007.
The Turkish government has decided to celebrate May Day as "Labor and Solidarity Day," but declined to declare it a national public holiday.
Observers say the Turkish government is reluctant to lift the ban due to concerns that it could turn into a mass anti-AKP rally over the controversial social security law.
Â
Â