People walk along Istiklal Avenue, decorated with Turkish national flags after Sunday's blast killed six and wounded dozens, in Istanbul, Turkey, November 14, 2022. REUTERS/Umit Bektas
For the first time since 2018, a number of relatives of people who were taken into custody in Turkey participated in an unofficial vigil on Saturday in central Istanbul.
The “Saturday Mothers” vigil has been rescheduled after Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya stated at a parliamentary session on Wednesday that the government had “good intentions” and that a peaceful solution will be found to the problem.
The group’s protest, involving around 10 people and held at Galatasaray Square near the Taksim district in central Istanbul, was its 972nd such vigil, it said in a statement on social media platform X.
“We will not stop searching for all our missing people and demanding that the perpetrators be tried and punished,” it said.
Turkish police had in 2018 told the Saturday Mothers that their protest – seeking justice for relatives who in the 1980s and 90s were kidnapped or detained without record – was banned and dispersed them with water cannon and tear gas.