Turkey’s president takes action at protest-rocked university
PTI, Feb 6, 2021, 7:21 PM IST
Istanbul: Turkey’s president has ordered the establishment of two new departments in the country’s most prestigious university, which has been rocked by weeks of demonstrations protesting his appointment of a new rector with government links.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s decision, published in the Official Gazette Saturday, says law and communications faculties are to be launched in Bogazici University. Critics say the establishment of new departments would allow the presidentially appointed rector to staff them with government loyalists.
For over a month, students and faculty have led mostly peaceful protests against the new rector, Melih Bulu, who has links to Erdogan’s ruling party. They are calling for Bulu’s resignation and for the university to be allowed to elect its own president.
In an open letter to Erdogan, protesting Bogazici students called the decision to open new departments intimidation and “petty tricks.”
“Your attempts to pack our university with your own political militants is the symptom of the political crisis you have fallen into,” the letter said.
Police have detained hundreds of demonstrators at the university and in solidarity protests elsewhere, some taken away following raids of their homes. Most were later released.
Top government officials have said terrorist groups are provoking the protests, and Erdogan has called the protesting students terrorists.
Istanbul governor’s office press statements have listed detention numbers with alleged links to outlawed leftist and Kurdish militant groups.
Officials from the United States, the United Nations and the European Union have criticized Turkey’s handling of the protests as well as a series of homophobic comments that were made by Erdogan and other officials while denouncing the demonstrations.
With the same order, the president opened new faculties in several universities, closed down some others and appointed 11 rectors elsewhere.
The students in their letter said they knew its publication would likely result in criminal complaints, including for insulting the president, but they vowed to continue speaking out and protesting.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
30 detained over killing of lawyer in clash between Bangladesh police, followers of jailed Hindu leader
‘Monks targetted by Islamist elements’: ISKCON Kolkata flags Bangladesh issue to Modi govt
Jaishankar says Indo-Pacific landscape calls for wider collaborative approach, terms G7 as partner for it
Will impose 25 per cent tariff on all imports from Canada, Mexico: Trump
Internal divisions leave open question whether Gandhi’s vision will ever be fully realised in India: Bill Clinton
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
CM Vijayan opens Huddle Global; Says Kerala will be key player in India’s deep tech ambitions
Bengaluru to host Aero India 2025 from Feb 10-14
Karnataka cabinet decides to reopen graft case against Ex-CM Yediyurappa and family
Man attacks nurse inside hospital, caught on camera
Special tribute concert for legendary singer SPB to be held in Bengaluru on Dec 8
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.