News - Country: Turkey - Theme: Human and Trade Union Rights Turkey: Police confront demonstrators
EI’s affiliate in Turkey, Eğitim Sen, has condemned the police crackdown on teachers and demonstrators gathered in Ankara for a protest march demanding quality education on 23 November, on the eve of the national Teachers’ Day.
Eğitim Sen had linked this demonstration to the EI Unite for Quality Education campaign. The EI Unite campaign was also mentioned in the invitation to join the event, and about 7,000 people from different Eğitim Sen branches across Turkey came together to promote quality education and decent conditions for education employees.
“In fact, it was not the ‘Teachers’ Day’ celebrations because, in Turkey, 24 November was installed as Teachers' Day by the coup d’état administration which seized power in 1980. That is why Eğitim Sen celebrates 5 October, not 24 November, as Teachers’ Day,” said Eğitim Sen General Secretary Mehmet Bozgeyik.
Police intervention
At the march, the crowd wanted to walk towards the Ministry of Education. However, police forces intervened suddenly during the peaceful demonstration. They did not allow the crowd to march past Kızılay Square, and chased protesters in side streets surrounding this square. This prevented demonstrators from arriving at the iconic Tandoğan Square.
The attack included teargas and water cannons and a number of people were injured by the police. Two Eğitim Sen members were wounded because of tear gas canisters.
Seven protesters were injured during the crackdown, while one female teacher sustained cerebral trauma due to the impact of a gas canister fired by the police, reported the national newspaper Hürriyet: “The teacher, Aslı Akdemir, has been transferred to the hospital. Doctors said although severe, her injury was not life-threatening.”
People were detained following the demonstration but released immediately and, fortunately, no demonstrator was seriously injured, the Turkish teacher union reported.
Tension between government and union
After the events, the Minister of Education said that it was not convenient for teachers to be involved in such protests in which they are confronted by the police, and that engaging in dialogue about educational matters was a better option.
“However, it is now a publicly known fact that Eğitim Sen has sent meeting requests to the ministry during two months and could get no response from the ministry,” deplored Bozgeyik.
Tension around education policies rose after the Turkish Government announced plans to change the status of test preparatory institutions, known as dershanes, turning them into private schools. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said they would not back down on the measure, criticising the test preparatory institutions for favouring high-income families. Some of the teachers participating in the march chanted slogans against the privatisation of education.
EI: Government must engage in social dialogue
“We firmly condemn the assault by police forces on peaceful demonstrators,” said Martin Rømer, Director of EI’s region, the European Trade Union Committee for Education (ETUCE). “We urge national authorities to engage in faithful dialogue with organisations representing educators to ensure free quality public education for all in this country.”
Source: Education International
- 463 reads
Human Rights
Ringing FOWPAL’s Peace Bell for the World:Nobel Peace Prize Laureates’ Visions and Actions
Protecting the World’s Cultural Diversity for a Sustainable Future
The Peace Bell Resonates at the 27th Eurasian Economic Summit
Declaration of World Day of the Power of Hope Endorsed by People in 158 Nations
Puppet Show I International Friendship Day 2020