Turkish main opposition leader releases message of solidarity on 7th anniversary of Gezi Protests

Turkish main opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu shared a video on social media to commemorate the seventh anniversary of Turkey's historic Gezi protests of 2013. The CHP leader read a poem by Turkish poet Nazım Hikmet to show solidarity with the protests, which started off with an environmental message but quickly became an anti-government movement.

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Turkish main opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu shared a video on social media to commemorate the seventh anniversary of Turkey's historic Gezi protests of 2013, when an environmental protest snowballed into a months-long anti-government movement.

Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Kılıçdaroğlu shared a video montage of footage from the protests of 2013, over which he is heard reading a poem by legendary Turkish poet Nazım Hikmet.

"It's not about falling hostage, it's about never turning yourself in!" Kılıçdaroğlu tweeted along with the video, citing a line from another poem by Hikmet.

The poem read by Kılıçdaroğlu has been translated as "The Song of the Sun Drinkers," a poem written in epic style about a quest undertaken with friends, while sipping on a "copper mug full of sun."

Thousands mark Gezi Park protests on seventh anniversaryThousands mark Gezi Park protests on seventh anniversary

The months-long protests caused violent clashes between protesters and police officers, with the latter using teargas, plastic bullets and pressurized water on civilians.

The video Kılıçdaroğlu released ended with photos of more than 20 persons who died during the protests, including 15-year-old Berkin Elvan who died as a result of getting hit in the head with a police gas canister while he was out to buy bread.

Also in the video was a photo of Ali İsmail Korkmaz, a 19-year-old university student who was fatally battered by police and opposing protesters in the college city of Eskişehir.

Elvan and Korkmaz's deaths became a symbol of police brutality in Turkey, as law enforcement continued to utilize brutal methods in the years following Gezi.

A total of 16 people were tried in the case into the Gezi Park protests. Osman Kavala, who was accused of being one of the “managers and organizers” of the protests, was arrested in November 2017 on suspicion of attempting to overthrow the government and the constitutional order through force and violence.

Kavala and eight other defendants were on Feb. 18 acquitted by a court outside Istanbul in the Gezi Park trial. Kavala remains in prison on separate charges.