Turkish main opposition sets up billboards across Istanbul in protest of massive price hikes

The main opposition CHP’s Istanbul Youth Branch has set up billboards across the city to draw attention to the exorbitant price hikes. Citizens hung their bills on the boards and expressed their reactions with the notes they wrote.

Duvar English 

The youth branch of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) set up billboards in the squares of Istanbul's 39 districts to draw attention to recent massive price hikes. 

Citizens hung their bills on the boards and wrote on them how they are struggling financially. 

“We don't have money to buy a test book,” one teenager wrote on the board. 

The CHP's Istanbul Youth Branch referred to these billboards as "walls of price hike" and said in a statement on Twitter: “In the squares of our 39 districts, we launched the ‘walls of price hike' so that our citizens can freely share their reactions. We will continue to be the voice of our people until these price hikes, which affect all of us deeply, are withdrawn.”

In a separate statement, CHP Youth Branch's head Gençosman Killik said: “Our youth branches will be on the field all over Turkey and will take various actions against price hikes." 

In January, inflation jumped to nearly 50% after a currency crash late last year triggered by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's unorthodox low interest rate policy, raising the cost of living for Turks already struggling to make ends meet.

Erdoğan leads in presidential race, outperforms expectations Google excessively recommends pro-government media outlets Half of Turkish men own gun, says foundation THY dismisses pilot for opposing regulation on praying in cockpit Turkey lifts visa requirement for six countries Family left homeless after landlord increases rent by five-fold