Supporters, opponents of Turkey's Erdogan clash in Washington

Erdogan met at the White House with US President Donald Trump for a visit that aimed to improve strained ties

Pro-Erdogan supporters wave Turkish flags during a rally in front of the White House in Washington,DC on May 16, 2017. Presidents Donald Trump and Recep Tayyip Erdogan stood side by side at the White House on Tuesday and promised to work through strained ties despite the Turkish leader's stern warning about Washington's arming of a Kurdish militia PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON:
Two people were arrested during a brawl outside the residence of Turkey's ambassador to Washington following a White House visit Tuesday by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Local news reports said Erdogan supporters and security guards clashed with Kurdish and Armenian protesters who accuse him of rights abuses, local news reports said.

Erdogan met at the White House with US President Donald Trump for a visit that aimed to improve strained ties.

Erdogan rejoins Turkey ruling party after near 3-year absence

After Erdogan left the White House, tensions over the Kurdish issue spilled onto the streets of Washington.

The Turkish president stopped by the ambassador's residence in the upscale Sheridan Circle neighborhood, where protests prompted city officials to shut down nearby streets, snarling traffic.

Police managed to keep the rival groups apart at first, but eventually were outmuscled and outmaneuvered.

Erdogan's security detail reportedly attacked protesters carrying the flag of the Kurdish PYD party outside the ambassador's residence.


Turkey's Erdogan to meet Trump at White House in mid-May

The government of Turkey believes that the Kurdish Peoples' Protection Units (YPG) in Syria are simply the Syrian arm of the PKK, which has waged a deadly insurgency inside Turkey since 1984.

Videos from Tuesday's protests in Washington, some of which were posted on the internet, showed people from both sides shouting and being punched -- with each side accusing the other of being the aggressors.

"We weren't doing anything wrong," a pro-Erdogan demonstrator, Mustafa Dikilitas, told ABC television. "We just celebrated our president."

"One of the YPG supporters ran across, picked up a megaphone, and hit a Turkish citizen with it," said another pro-Erdogan demonstrator, Busra Eren, referring to the Kurdish militia group.

Demonstrators on the other side, meanwhile, blamed Erdogan's partisans for the violence.

"All of the sudden they just ran towards us," Yazidi Kurd demonstrator Lucy Usoyan told ABC, adding that she was attacked by one of the pro-Erdogan supporters.

"Someone was beating me in the head nonstop, and I thought, 'Okay, I'm on the ground already, what is the purpose to beat me?'"

Washington police eventually sent reinforcements and restored order, but emergency services said nine people were taken to the hospital, one of them in critical condition.
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