Protests in Turkey have taken Twitter by storm, with activists and government supporters battling it out on the social network. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan claimed the most violent protests in a decade are caused by extremists and foreign provocateurs.
While Turkish press were slow to cover the anti-government
protests that have gripped the country for the past week, Twitter
users wasted no time sounding off.
Several hashtags relating to the violent upheaval have popped up
on the social network and trended worldwide. After Turkish Prime
Minister Erdogan returned from North Africa and gave a speech to
the cheering supporters who greeted him at Istanbul’s airport,
the hashtag #ProvokatörEylemci ('provocateur activists') topped
the list.
The hashtag pools together Twitter users who are echoing
Erdogan’s accusation that the protests are motivated by
extremists and foreign provocateurs. The Turkish leader said that
the protest should stop immediately, condemned activists as
“vandals” and defended the use of force to suppress them.
A large proportion of those using the hashtag are members of
Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its youth
branch. RT source Beyza Burcak said she was inclined to believe
the hashtag “appeared arbitrarily,” while it was possible
that the AKP created it to discredit the protesters.
“He [Erdogan] keeps saying that there are vandals in the protest
who destroy everything in streets etc. but from the beginning the
aim of this protest has been to be peaceful,” Burcak told RT.
On Saturday, the tables turned and the hashtag
#provokatörbaşbakanİstemiyoruz ('provocateur we don’t want the
Prime Minister') topped the Twitter trending list.
Simultaneously, thousands of activists gathered for a mass sit-in
at Taksim Square to protest Erdogan’s authoritarian rule.
Hackivist group Anonymous and the Syrian Electronic Army also
joined the cyber-battle, saying they hacked the Turkish Prime
Minister’s network and stole personal information during the
week. Erdogan’s office confirmed to Reuters on Wednesday that the
cyber-attack had occurred.
"Anonymous has successfully infiltrated Turkish Prime
Ministry's network (basbakanlik.gov.tr). Anonymous is sharing
with you the full user list of the domain BASBAKANLIK that is the
main domain of the Prime Ministry of Turkey," the hackivist
group tweeted. A group calling itself @AnonsTurkey went on to
praise Gezi Turkey as one of the most noble current social
movements.
The group said they did not publicly release the information they
hacked “because Anonymous respects people’s privacy.”
The social upheaval began in Turkey last week when police cracked
down violently on a group of protesters demonstrating against the
demolition of Gezi Park. Clashes between police and protesters,
some of whom called for Erdogan to step down, followed the
initial outbreak.
The EU has called for a probe into police conduct during the
protests after numerous reports of excessive force being used to
disperse activists, with three people dead and thousands more
injured in clashes between police and demonstrators. Prime
Minister Erdogan responded by accusing the EU of hypocrisy,
claiming that such tactics were commonplace in other European
countries and the US.