160 workers freed after Istanbul airport protest

Istanbul Grand Airport is under fire over its safety record after 27 workers died in work-related accidents


Afp September 16, 2018
After hundreds of construction workers were arrested on Friday, people took to the streets to support them but this too was broken up by Turkish police who detained another 20 people. PHOTO AFP

ANKARA: Turkey has freed 160 workers out of almost 600 who were arrested following a protest over work-related deaths and poor conditions at the construction site for Istanbul's third airport.

Hundreds of labourers were arrested late on Friday as the security forces sought to break up a demonstration outside Istanbul Grand Airport, a huge development which Ankara has claimed will be the biggest in the world.


Another 20 were arrested on Saturday as they rallied in support of the detainees.


Some 35,000 people are employed on the project which is due to be completed next month but which has come under fire over its safety record after 27 workers died at the site, half of them in work-related accidents, transport ministry figures show.


Turkish police detain hundreds of protesting airport workers


But around a quarter of them have now been released, union figures told AFP on Sunday.


"Nearly 600 of our friends were arrested, and 160 were freed last night," Ozgur Karabulut, who heads the Dev Yapi-Is union, told AFP.


"We don't have any information about the others, nor do their lawyers nor the MPs," he told a press conference in Istanbul, which was also attended by other union reps.


At Friday's demonstration, the protesters complained about work-related deaths and accidents at the site, as well as poor living conditions, which reportedly included fleas and bedbugs.


In a statement issued on Friday, airport construction and operating company IGA said management had met the workers and pledged to resolve the issues "as quickly as possible".


Pakistan, Turkey to revive FTA talks


Contacted by AFP on Saturday, the IGA made no comment on the arrests.


Despite the figures of 27 on-site deaths released by the transport ministry in April, several workers told AFP the number was likely much higher, saying accidents were very common at the site.


Earlier this year, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the new airport would be the biggest in the world with a first phase capacity of 90 million passengers a year, reaching 150 million by 2023.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ