Clashes as Turkey bans Gay Pride in Istanbul

For the third consecutive year, Turkey’s blocked the annual Gay Pride march in Istanbul. Police with riot shields and helmets sealed off entrances to Istiklal Street, where organisers had planned to hold the rally before authorities announced the ban on Saturday, citing security concerns after threats from an ultra-nationalist group. Police shut down LGBT pride marches in Istanbul today – that’s a plain-clothes officer kicking a protester in the gut. #Pride2017 ( Getty) pic.twitter.com/veT5rW90BE— justin michael (@JstnMchl) June 25, 2017 Small groups gathered in side-streets waving rainbow flags, symbols of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender pride. Police fired rubber bullets to disperse the demonstrators and detained several people. Footage posted on the internet also appeared to show them firing tear gas at one location. Istanbul’s pride march attracted tens of thousands of people in the past, making it one of the biggest in the Muslim world. But in 2015 it was broken up by police and it was banned last year. Ultra-nationalist group threatens to block LGBT Pride March in Istanbul https://t.co/g1BVC4BtMu pic.twitter.com/a3pmWCQEoG— Hürriyet Daily News (@HDNER) June 19, 2017