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Amnesty International: Turkey guilty of human rights abuses

ANKARA, Turkey, Oct. 2 (UPI) -- Turkish authorities committed human rights violations while trying to crush the Gezi Park protests this summer, Amnesty International said.

In a report released Wednesday, the human rights organization said Turkish authorities denied citizens the right to peacefully assemble and protest a government plan to create a replica of Ottoman military barracks in the place of Gezi Park in Istanbul.

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Some 8,000 people were injured and three died in the July protests.

"The attempt to smash the Gezi Park protest movement involved a string of human rights violations on a huge scale. They include the wholesale denial of the right to peaceful assembly and violations of the rights to life, liberty and the freedom from torture and ill-treatment," said Andrew Gardner, Amnesty International's expert on Turkey.

The report said protesters were beaten, resulting in at least one death; police fired plastic bullets at protesters' heads; tear gas canisters were fired at protesters and in homes, resulting in injuries and at least one death; chemical irritants were added to water cannon tanks; women protesters were sexually abused by law enforcement, and police used live ammunition, killing one person.

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"The levels of violence used by police in the course of Gezi Park protests clearly show what happens when poorly trained, poorly supervised police officers are instructed to use force -- and encouraged to use it unsparingly -- safe in the knowledge that they are unlikely ever to be identified or prosecuted for their abuses," Gardner said.

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