Erdoğan says 'terrorists’ behind university protests as 30 detained at Ankara’s Boğaziçi
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Saturday dismissed a university student
protest in Istanbul as freedom of expression, saying the protests were led by
terror-linked individuals.
Opportunists
used the “routine appointment’’ of a
rector to cause chaos in Turkish universities, Diken new site cited Erdoğan as
saying in speech marking a highway and bridge opening in southeast Turkey.
Erdoğan’s
remarks arrive as Turkish police on Friday detained 30 people in capital Ankara
following a show of support for recent student protests in Istanbul.
Hundreds of
students have taken part this week in demonstrations against the appointment of
Melih Bulu to head the prestigious Boğaziçi University by presidential decree,
overriding previous legislation requiring rectors to be selected through an
election process.
Critics say
the appoint of Bulu, who unsuccessfully stood as a candidate for the governing
Justice and Development Party at the 2015 general election, undercuts academic
freedoms at a time when the government is promising democratic reform.
“We are together following those who are turning a
routine appointment into an opportunity to cause chaos in our universities,’’
Erdoğan said.
“Such actions, in which terror-linked individuals are the forefront, have nothing tod with democracy, search for justice or freedom of opinion or expression,’’ he added.
Police
enforcing COVID-19 measures intervened against a gathering expressing sympathy
with Boğaziçi students in Ankara’s Güvenpark, Anadolu agency said. Thirty
people were detained.
Earlier in
the day, public prosecutors In Istanbul referred two students for arrest and
released 20 under judicial controls for their alleged role in the protest
movement.



