Protesters shout slogans during a demonstration against Turkish security forces, after an incident in the Lice district of Diyarbakır province killed one person and wounded seven on Friday, in İstanbul on June 29, 2013.
Turkish security forces killed one person and wounded ten on Friday when they fired on a group protesting against the construction of a new gendarmerie outpost in Kurdish-dominated southeastern Turkey.
The incident, in Kayacık village in Diyarbakır province, appeared to be the most violent in the region since a ceasefire declaration by jailed Kurdish rebel chief Abdullah Öcalan in March in a decades-old conflict between his fighters and the Turkish state, and it risks derailing the nascent peace process.
The mourners in the city of Diyarbakır warned Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan to respect the peace process.
“Behave, Erdoğan, don’t push us to the mountains!” they chanted, referring to the camps of Öcalan’s Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in the mountains of northern Iraq from where they used to attack targets within Turkey.
In a mark of solidarity with the Kurds, Turkish public sector workers joined members of the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) in a peaceful march through İstanbul on Saturday.
The Kurdish tensions come at a time of increased vigilance and nervousness among Turkish security forces after weeks of unrelated anti-government protests in İstanbul, Ankara and other cities in which four people died and thousands injured.
Erdoğan tried on Friday to reassure Turkey’s Kurds that those protests, quelled with water cannons and tear gas, would not harm the peace process in the southeast.
“The peace process was not affected (by these protests)… and our brotherhood grew stronger thanks to our people’s common sense,” he said.
Turkey’s interior ministry said four inspectors would investigate Friday’s incident, which it said had involved up to 250 people attacking the construction site. It said the death resulted from warning shots fired to disperse the crowd.