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WSWS : News
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East : Turkey
Turkeys bloody 1977 May Day still clouded in mystery
By Sinan Ikinci
1 May 2003
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May 1, 1977 was a time of increasing economic and political
crisis for Turkey.
The Revolutionary Confederation of Labor Unions (DISK) organized
a May Day demonstration in Taksim Square in Istanbul. Demonstrators
filled the square, and the crowds flowed into the surrounding
area. In Besiktas, hundreds of thousands of people had gathered
in the early morning hours to march to the rally. By the time
DISK General Chairman Kemal Turkler delivered his his May Day
speech, all the roads leading into the area were still full of
people marching. It was nearly 7 p.m. before the last contingents
were able to reach the Taksim area.
The DISK general chairman was about to finish his speech when
three gunshots sounded. First there was stillness, and then a
deadly pandemonium broke out. The crowd of 500,000 dispersed in
panic.
People who had been lying in ambush inside buildings in the
vicinity of the meeting area, in the Intercontinental Hotel (now
The Marmara Istanbul) and in the Water Authority building, rained
bullets down on the crowd with automatic weapons. As the firing
spread, armored personnel carriers went into action. Noise bombs
and the firing of the automatic weapons suddenly turned the meeting
area into a battlefield. Thousands of people lay down where they
were, while others running to escape were shoved into corners
and crushed by the armored vehicles.

Automatic weapons fire from a white Renault was turned on thousands
of people who were fleeing down Kazanci Yokusu, a street that
intersects Taksim square. A truck parked in the middle of the
narrow street blocked the road. Those who were fleeing were squeezed
together, piled up one on top of one another, and a number of
them were suffocated or crushed.
Sukran Ketenci (her last name today is Soner), one of the writers
from the Cumhuriyet newspaper, described what she saw in
the aftermath: Two armored vehicles hurriedly entered the
area from the Taskisli road. They moved in a searching manner
which drove the crowd, which was already squeezed together, towards
the speakers platform. I saw quite clearly a woman in a light-colored
dress fall under the vehicle.
The incident had tremendous repercussions in the press in Turkey
and around the world. Thirty-six people died, hundreds were wounded
and 453 were arrested.
While some characterized the incident as a provocation of the
Nationalist Front [the right-wing government coalition] carried
out under the management of the CIA, a portion of the police and
bourgeois press advanced the idea that the firing was started
by extreme leftists.
However, evidence presented in court opened the curtain of
reality, even if only a crack. Police charged 98 people arrested
at random with responsibility for the massacre. None of them were
involved, and all were acquitted. While the judge called upon
the authorities to renew the investigation and prosecute those
genuinely responsible, successive military-dominated regimes suppressed
the case.
During the trial, Oleyis [the hotel workers union] Branch Chairman
Ali Kocaman had the information which he had received from hotel
personnel placed in the minutes: Three days earlier, the
third, fourth and fifth floors of the Intercontinental Hotel were
emptied and no one was allowed on the floors, which were under
police control. Americans had come and stayed on the floors which
the personnel were not allowed to enter. After the incident, these
people checked out of the hotel.
In 1987, former Deputy Prime Minister Sadi Kocas answered questions
put to him in an investigative article that appeared in the Hurriyet
newspaper on May 8. Kocas related the following:
It was not one incident which occurred on May 1. Ever
since 1968-69 and the 1970s, there were a series of at least seven
to eight incidents a year.... There were those who arranged this.
There were those who wanted to stir things up internally and externally....
The counter-guerillas are an organization made up of a number
of people who say We are counter-guerrillas against guerillas.
These are accountable to themselves as guerillas or commandos
but they get their authority from an official office. What is
that office? Perhaps the president and the head of the General
Staff are in command, I cant know, but definitely it is
part of the National Intelligence Agency.... I know these names
and some of these high-level people who were carrying out these
works were being discussed. According to what I remember, they
were working for MIT [the secret service]. They were the ones
who were giving the orders for the basic crimes.
On May 7, 1977, Bulent Ecevit, later to become prime minister,
attracted little attention with his statement at an Izmir meeting,
The finger of the counter-guerrillas was in the May 1 incidents.
According to Article 102 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), the
case expired due to the statute of limitations after 20 years
had elapsed. And according to lawyer Rasim Oz, who witnessed the
bloody May Day of 1977, The case was deliberately brought
to a point where it would be closed due to the statute of limitations.
The incident has been commemorated on May 1 ever since in Turkey.
Since 1977, however, no one has been able to use Taksim Square
for a May Day celebration. Never could such a crowd be gathered
again, and May 1 was no longer officially recognized as a holiday.
After the September 12, 1980 coup, May 1 celebrations were banned
for eight years.
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