Turkish police batter LGBTI pride marchers, detaining at least 36 in capital Ankara

Turkish police have once again brutally dispersed the Pride march in the capital Ankara and carried out at least 36 detentions.

Reuters

Turkish police used teargas and pepper spray to halt an LGBTQ+ Pride march in the capital Ankara on July 5, detaining at least 36 people after authorities banned such marches in cities across the country for security reasons.

Reuters journalists saw police pepper spraying activists and dragging them across the ground before handcuffing them and putting them in buses. UniKuir, an Ankara based group of LGBTQ+ activists, said at least 36 people were detained.

Last week in Istanbul, police dispersed a larger annual Pride march and detained more than 300 people.

Thousands of people used to attend annual Pride marches on Istanbul's main Istiklal Avenue, but in recent years the government led by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) has toughened its stance on gay rights.

Homosexuality is not a crime in Turkey, but hostility to it is widespread and police crackdowns on Pride parades have been increasingly tougher over the years.

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