The
sentencing of two Turkish police officers over the death of a protester in 2013
has provoked protests in Kayseri province in Central Anatolia. Ali
Ismail Korkmaz, 19, died during clashes between police, civilians and
demonstrators in Gezi Park in Istanbul. Continue..
The
officers were given 10-year prison terms but protesters outside the court in
Kayseri said that was too lenient.
The
unrest in May 2013 was sparked by plans to redevelop the park but grew into
wider anti-government protests.
The decision by the court, which
had also sentenced four civilians to three to six years in prison and acquitted
another two police officers, drew angry reaction from the gallery.
Korkmaz's
mother Emel Korkmaz cursed the Turkish justice system as she left the courtroom
and the father of another victim of the Gezi protests shouted: "You are
not the people's police, but the police of murderers".
As news
of the sentence spread, comments appeared on social media criticising what many
see as a "lenient" punishment. Images on Twitter showed people being
tear gassed by police as they voiced their anger.
Speaking
via a video link from a prison cell in Ankara, Mevlut Saldogan, the first
policeman sentenced, admitted to attacking other protesters, but denied that he
had murdered Korkmaz.
Like in
previous hearings, he stated that he "did what was necessary",
describing the Gezi protests as "an attempted coup".
Ali Ismail Korkmaz was beaten
up during protests in Gezi Park, located in Taksim Square, in June 2013 and
died the following month after morethan
five weeks in a coma.
Human
rights organisations say thousands of demonstrators were injured by police but
only a handful of cases have so far gone to court.
They
say the case in Kayseri went ahead despite an attempted cover-up by the police,
including the destruction of CCTV footage which was later recovered and became
a key piece of evidence.
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