Turkey officials blame foreign media for much of the Gezi Park violence in Istanbul

Turkish politicians, including President Abdullah Gul, reacted harshly to foreign media coverage of the ongoing Gezi protests, with state-run Anatolia news agency attempting to create a Twitter campai

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Turkish politicians, including President Abdullah Gul, reacted harshly to foreign media coverage of the ongoing Gezi protests, with state-run Anatolia news agency attempting to create a Twitter campaign over the ongoing London protests under the hashtag โ€œoccupylondon.โ€

Anatolia news agency gave a detailed report of the events that have been occurring in London, highlighting the number of detainments, while posting the story under the โ€œoccupylondonโ€ hashtag on Twitter. The hashtag was picked up quickly by ruling party supporters, with tweets exaggerating the ongoing events in London as users warned their friends and relatives in London to be careful.

The social campaign soon turned into response to the previous nightโ€™s coverage of the Gezi events by foreign media outlets, and the โ€œoccupylondonโ€ hashtag became one the trending topics of the day.

Turkish President Gul also frowned upon the foreign media coverage of the events, criticizing the stories for attempting to draw a parallel between the Gezi protests and the events happening in the countries of the Middle East.

โ€œYou have to put whatโ€™s happening there, and what is happening in Turkey in separate ranks,โ€ Gul said. โ€œEspecially foreign media outlets should be very careful about this.โ€

Several other social media attempts occurred following the nights events, with hashtags like โ€œYouCANTstopTurkishSuccessโ€ and โ€œGoHomeLiarCNNbbcANDreuterโ€ being used frequently by Turkish ministers, including Minister of EU Affairs Egement Bagis and Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, who also tweeted, โ€œMy regards to the Anatolian kids who defend their country,โ€ according to Anatolia news agency.

CNN International in particular was one of the most-watched outlets during the June 11 intervention, with CNN reporter Christiane Amanpour quickly becoming a social media topic when she ended her interview with interview with one of prime ministerโ€™s advisors, Ibrahim Kalin by saying, โ€œThe show is over.โ€

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • Turkish President Gul also frowned upon the foreign media coverage of the events, criticizing the stories for attempting to draw a parallel between the Gezi protests and the events happening in the countries of the Middle East.
  • The social campaign soon turned into response to the previous night's coverage of the Gezi events by foreign media outlets, and the โ€œoccupylondonโ€ hashtag became one the trending topics of the day.
  • The hashtag was picked up quickly by ruling party supporters, with tweets exaggerating the ongoing events in London as users warned their friends and relatives in London to be careful.

About the author

Avatar of Linda Hohnholz

Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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