Turkish police have attacked anti-government protesters who thronged Istanbuls Taksim Square despite a crackdown on demonstrations held to criticize Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogans policies.
The police used water cannons and fired tear gas on Saturday to disperse thousands of people who returned to the city's central square for a memorial to those killed in anti-government protests over the past few weeks.
Video footage showed scuffles at the scene, with police charging at and chasing away protesters.
The security forces also arrested a number of people.
The demonstrators returned despite tight security and a massive police deployment, one day after clashes left one protester dead and several others injured in the Kurdish-majority southeastern province of Diyarbakir.
Istanbul has been the epicenter of anti-government demonstrations since May 31, when the police broke up a sit-in staged in Istanbuls Taksim Square to protest against the plan to demolish Gezi Park.
Several people have been killed in the violent crackdown on peaceful protesters, who Erdogan has described as foreign-backed extremists and terrorists.
Earlier on Saturday, Turkish artists, journalists, and authors placed full-page advertisements in several newspapers, asking Erdogan to stop using divisive language.
We are concerned. The 'you vs. us' rhetoric is sharpening the polarization of society, the advertisement said.
There is an air of frustration and hatred around, it added.