The
Justice and Development Party (AKP) led by
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has governed since 2002, winning the
2002,
2007 and
2011 elections by large margins. Under its rule the
economy of Turkey recovered from the 2001 financial crisis and recession, driven in particular by a construction boom. At the same time, particularly since 2011, it has been accused of driving forward an
Islamist agenda, having undermined the secularist influence of the
Turkish Army. During the same period it also increased a range of restrictions on human rights, most notably
freedom of speech and
freedom of the press, despite improvements resulting from the
accession process to the European Union. Since 2011, the AKP has increased restrictions on freedom of speech, freedom of the press, Internet use, television content, and the right to free assembly. It has also developed links with
Turkish media groups, and used administrative and legal measures (including, in
one case, a $2.5 billion tax fine) against critical media groups and journalists: "over the last decade the AKP has built an informal, powerful, coalition of party-affiliated businessmen and media outlets whose livelihoods depend on the political order that Erdoğan is constructing. Those who resist do so at their own risk." An education reform strengthening
Islamic elements and courses in public primary and high schools was approved by the parliament in 2012, with Erdoğan saying that he wanted to foster a "pious generation." The sale and consumption of alcohol in university campuses has been banned. People have been given jail sentences for
blasphemy. While construction in Turkey has boomed and has been a major driver for the economy, this has involved little to no local consultation. For example, major construction projects in Istanbul have been "opposed by widespread coalitions of diverse interests. Yet in every case, the government has run roughshod over the projects' opponents in a dismissive manner, asserting that anyone who does not like what is taking place should remember how popular the AKP has been when elections roll around."
Environmental issues, especially since the 2010 decision of the government to build additional
nuclear power plants and the
third bridge, led to continued demonstrations in Istanbul and Ankara. The
Black Sea Region has seen dozens of protests against the construction of waste-dumps, nuclear and coal power plants, mines, factories and hydroelectric dams. 24 local musicians and activists in 2012 created a video entitled "Diren Karadeniz" ("Resist, Black Sea"), which prefigured the ubiquitous Gezi Park slogan "Diren Gezi". The government's stance on the
civil war in Syria is another cause of social tension in the country. Controversy within progressive communities has been sparked by plans to turn Turkey's former Christian
Hagia Sophia churches in
Trabzon and possibly Istanbul into mosques, a plan which failed to gain the support of prominent Muslim leaders from Trabzon. (Note: In 2020, seven years after the Gezi Park protests, the
Hagia Sophia of Istanbul was turned into a mosque.) In 2012 and 2013, structural weaknesses in Turkey's economy were becoming more apparent. Economic growth slowed considerably in 2012 from 8.8% in 2011 to 2.2% in 2012 and forecasts for 2013 were below trend. Unemployment remained high at at least 9% and the current account deficit was growing to over 6% of GDP. A key issue Erdoğan campaigned for prior to the 2011 election was to rewrite the military-written constitution from 1982. Key amongst Erdoğan's demands were for Turkey to transform the role of President from that of a ceremonial role to an executive presidential republic with emboldened powers and for him to be elected president in the 2014 presidential elections. To submit such proposals to a referendum needs 330 out of 550 votes in the
Grand National Assembly and to approve without referendum by parliament requires 367 out of 550 votes (a two-thirds majority)—the AKP currently holds only 326 seats. As such the constitutional commission requires agreement from opposition parties, namely the CHP, MHP and BDP who have largely objected to such proposals. Moreover, the constitutional courts have ruled that current president
Abdullah Gül is permitted to run for the 2014 elections, who is widely rumoured to have increasingly tense relations and competition with Erdoğan. Furthermore, many members of parliament in the governing AKP have internally also objected by arguing that the current presidential system suffices. Erdoğan himself was barred from running for a fourth term as prime minister in the 2015 general elections due to AKP by-laws, largely sparking accusations from the public that Erdoğan's proposals were stated in light of him only intending to prolong his rule as the most dominant figure in politics. The constitutional proposals have mostly so far been delayed in deliberations or lacked any broad agreement for reforms.
Events leading up to the protests •
29 October 2012: The governor of
Ankara bans a planned
Republic Day march organised by secularist opposition groups. Despite the ban, thousands of people, including the leader of Turkey's largest opposition party
CHP gather at
Ulus Square. Riot police forces attack the protesters with tear gas and watercannon, despite the fact that there were many children and elderly people in the crowd. •
Early February 2013: The government attempts to make
abortion virtually unobtainable. This follows Erdoğan's sparking his campaign against abortion in June 2012, which later saw various protests by feminist groups and individuals. •
19 February: A survey conducted by Kadir Has University (incorporating up to 20 000 interviewees from 26 of 81 provinces and having a low margin of error) shows considerable disapproval of Erdoğan's strongly advocated proposed change from a parliamentary system to an American-style executive presidential system by 2014—65.8% opposed and 21.2% in support. •
February–March: A large bank in Turkey,
Ziraat Bank, changes its name from "T.C. Ziraat Bankası" to simply "Ziraat Bankası", thus omitting the acronym of the Republic of Turkey, T.C., (
Türkiye Cumhuriyeti). The Turkish Ministry of Health also stops using T.C. in signs. In protest, thousands of people start using TC in front of their names on Facebook and Twitter as a silent protest. Some people believe that the AKP is trying to change the name or the regime of the country while others believe that this omission of the letters TC is a sign of privatization of the Ziraat bank and hospitals. •
Late March: The Nawroz celebrations were missing the Turkish flag. Many view this as a denigration of the republic. Opposition members of parliament protest by bringing personal flags into the chamber whilst seated. •
2 April: The AKP's Istanbul branch head, Aziz Babuşçu, broadly hints that he expects his own party to lose liberal support. •
3 April: Excavation for construction begins for the hugely controversial giant Camlica Mosque in Istanbul. It is a signature policy ambition of Erdoğan—planned to be 57,511 square metres, have capacity for up to 30,000 simultaneous worshipers and to have minarets as tall as 107.1 metres (representing the year of the Turkish victory in the
Battle of Manzikert). Residents of Istanbul have long complained that the project is unnecessary and would disfigure the skyline and environment by the logging involved. Even many highly religious lobbies and figures object to the plan, with one religiously conservative intellectual in late 2012 calling such plans a "cheap replica" of the
Blue Mosque and wrote to Erdoğan imploring him not to embarrass coming generations with such "unsightly work". •
15 April: World-renowned Turkish pianist Fazıl Say is handed a suspended 10-month prison sentence for "insulting religious beliefs held by a section of the society," bringing to a close a controversial case while sparking fiery reaction and disapproval in Turkey and abroad. Fazıl Say is an atheist and a self-proclaimed opponent of Erdoğan. •
1 May: Riot police uses water cannon and tear gas to prevent May Day marchers reaching the
Taksim square. The government cites renovation work as the reason for closing the square. •
11 May: Twin car bombs kill 52 people and wounded 140 in
Reyhanlı near the
Syrian border. The government claims Syrian government involvement, but many locals blame government policies. •
16 May: Erdoğan pays an official visit to the United States to visit
Barack Obama to discuss the crisis in Syria amidst other matters. Both leaders reaffirm their commitment to topple the Assad regime, despite the growing unpopularity of the policy amongst Turkish citizens. •
18 May: Protesters clash with police in Reyhanlı. •
22 May: Turkish hacker group
RedHack released secret documents which belongs to
Turkish Gendarmerie. According to documents,
National Intelligence Organization (Turkey), Turkish Gendarmerie and
General Directorate of Security knew the attack would be one month in advance. •
22 May An official from the ruling AKP, Mahmut Macit, sparks considerable controversy after calling for the "annihilation of atheists" on his Twitter account. :Armenian-Turkish writer,
Sevan Nişanyan, is charged with 58 weeks in jail for an alleged insult to the Islamic prophet,
Muhammad in a blog post, on charges similar to those faced by Fazıl Say. •
24 May: The government votes to ban the sale of alcohol in shops between 22:00 and 06:00, sponsorship of events by drinks companies and any consumption of alcohol within 100m of mosques. The laws are passed less than two weeks after public announcement with no public consultation. •
25 May: In response to Erdoğan's warning against couples displaying romantic displays of affection in public, dozens of couples gathered in an Ankara subway station to protest by kissing. The police quickly intervened and violently tried to end it. •
27 May: The undebated decision to name the Third Bosphorus Bridge
Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge, for
Selim I, is criticised by
Alevi groups (some
15–30% of Turkey's population), as Alevis consider the Sultan responsible for the deaths of dozens of Alevis after the
Battle of Chaldiran. It is also been criticised by some Turkish and foreign sources (e.g.,
Iran's Nasr TV) as a reflection of Erdoğan's policy of alliance with the
US Government against
Bashar al-Assad, as Sultan
Selim I conquered the lands of
Syria for the
Ottoman Empire after the
Battle of Marj Dabiq. Some "democrats and liberals" also would have preferred a more politically neutral name, with
Mario Levi suggesting naming the bridge after
Rumi or
Yunus Emre. •
28 May Erdoğan derides controversy regarding alcohol restrictions stating "Given that a law made by two drunkards is respected, why should a law that is commanded by religion be rejected by your side". By many, this is seen as a reference to
Atatürk and
İnönü, founders of the Turkish Republic. •
29 May: In a parliamentary debate, the government opposes a proposed extension of LGBT rights in Turkey.
Gezi Park , built 1806, turned into
Taksim Stadium in 1921, and demolished in 1940 as seen from the Marmara Hotel on
Taksim Square The initial cause of the protests was the plan to remove
Gezi Park, one of the few remaining green spaces in the center of the European side of Istanbul. The plan involved pedestrianising
Taksim Square and rebuilding the
Ottoman-era Taksim Military Barracks, which had been demolished in 1940. Development projects in Turkey involve "cultural preservation boards" which are supposed to be independent of the government, and in January such a board rejected the project as not serving the public interest. However a higher board overturned this on 1 May, in a move park activists said was influenced by the government. The ground floor of the rebuilt barracks was expected to house a shopping mall, and the upper floors luxury flats, although in response to the protests the likelihood of a shopping mall was downplayed, and the possibility of a museum raised. The main contractor for the project is the
Kalyon Group, described in 2013 by
BBC News as "a company which has close ties with the governing AKP." The Gezi Park protests began in April, having started with a petition in December 2012. The protests were renewed on 27 May, culminating in the creation of an encampment occupying the park. A raid on this encampment on 29 May prompted outrage and wider protests. The large number of trees that were cut in the forests of northern Istanbul for the construction of the
Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge (Third Bosphorus Bridge) and the new
Istanbul Airport (the world's largest airport, with a capacity for 150 million passengers per year) were also influential in the public sensitivity for protecting Gezi Park. According to official Turkish government data, a total of 2,330,012 ==Timeline==