Man Hurt when Turkish Police Clash with Protesters

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One man was injured when Turkish riot police on Thursday fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse a group of Istanbul protesters hurling Molotov cocktails and stones.

Tensions are high in Turkey with the approach of the first anniversary of deadly nationwide anti-government protests and in the wake of an unprecedented mine disaster that claimed 301 lives last week.

"I have been informed that police were attacked by Molotov cocktails and a 30-year-old man was injured," Huseyin Avni Mutlu, the governor of commercial hub Istanbul, told reporters.

The governor added that a gun had been used in the incident but did not elaborate.

Private Dogan news agency published the picture of a man lying on the ground with a pool of blood around his head in the Okmeydani district of the city, the scene of sporadic clashes.

Dogan said police fired tear gas and water cannon at up to 20 protesters who denounced the death of a teenage boy who fell into a coma during anti-government unrest last year. They also protested last week's mine disaster in the eastern Turkish city of Soma.

The news agency said the police also fired gunshots into the air, but an eyewitness who did not give his name told AFP that police fired live bullets at the crowd.

The victim fell to the ground with an apparent head wound and was taken to the hospital in a serious condition, added Dogan without saying what caused the wound.

Demonstrators responded to the tear gas and water cannon by hurling stones and Molotov cocktails at police and setting fire to an armored police vehicle, Dogan said.

Police also intervened twice when protesters attempted to march toward the hospital where the wounded man was being treated, an AFP photographer saw.

Around 400 demonstrators later staged a sit-in outside the hospital, chanting slogans: "Murderer state has taken another life."

Eight people, including the teenage boy and at least one policeman, died as a result of the anti-government unrest last year that erupted when police cracked down heavily on a peaceful campaign to save a small Istanbul park from redevelopment.

The protests, which also left 8,000 people wounded, soon snow-balled into a campaign against the perceived authoritarian tendencies of the Islamic-rooted government.

The government crackdown earned Turkey a harsh rebuke from its Western allies.

Sporadic protests have continued against controversial measures taken by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in response to a massive corruption scandal implicating key government allies, including an Internet crackdown that saw Twitter banned for two weeks.

The mine tragedy -- the worst in the country's history -- has caused a new wave of fury against Erdogan ahead of an expected run for the presidency in August.

Protesters clashed with police in several cities after Erdogan played down the incident by comparing it to mining disasters from 19th-century Britain and photographs of one of his aides kicking a protester emerged.

Despite the protests, the corruption scandal and Erdogan's perceived authoritarianism, the premier's Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party scored a resounding victory in March 30 local elections.

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