Turkish Police Break Up LGBTQ Pride March; 30 Detained
Police in Turkey’s capital broke up an LGBTQ Pride march Tuesday and detained dozens of people.
Turkish authorities have banned LGBTQ events, but about 50 people holding rainbow flags nevertheless marched toward a main park to mark the end of Pride Month.
Police officers prevented the group from reaching the park, detaining the participants on a busy street in central Ankara.
Some of the marchers were forced to the ground, angering passers-by who tried to physically intervene or pleaded with officers to let them go. Plain-clothed officers were seen pushing them away.
Organizers said at least 30 people were detained.
A small group of Islamists, who regard the LGBTQ community as a threat, held a counterdemonstration near the park.
Turkey previously was one of the few Muslim-majority countries to allow Pride marches. The first was held in 2003, the year after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s party came to power.
In recent years, the government has adopted a harsh approach to public events by groups that do not represent its religiously conservative views. Large numbers of arrests and the use of tear gas and plastic pellets by police have accompanied Pride events.
More than 300 LGBTQ people were briefly detained following a ban on Pride events in Istanbul late last month.
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