Turkish police officers, right, detained an unidentified man Thursday as he tried to approach the bearer of the Olympic torch in Istanbul, while a Chinese security force, in blue, secured the flame bearer. The motive of the attack was not immediately known. (Fatih Saribas/Reuters )
The demonstrators were detained after they broke away from a larger group of protesters and shouted slogans just feet away from Tugba Karademir, a Turkish figure skater and Olympic athlete who had just started to run with the torch through the city.
About 200 Uighur Muslims had converged ahead of the ceremony near Istanbul's Blue Mosque and the domed Haghia Sofia church.
The Olympic flame is on a global tour before the summer games in Beijing. Activists have called for protests following unrest in Tibet. There also have been reports of unrest by the Uighur minority in China's Xinjiang region. Uighurs are related to Turks, and Turkey is home to an Uighur community.
"Turkey, stand by your brothers," read a banner at the protest in Istanbul.
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"We don't want a country like China, with a bad human rights record, to hold the Olympics, which symbolize humanity, peace and brotherhood," protester Hayrullah Efendigil said.
Police outnumbered the protesters and hemmed them in, making it difficult for them to move around freely. Some tourists photographed the group.
Some members of the Uighur expatriate community in Turkey have been militant in calling for independence for Xinjiang, or what they refer to as East Turkestan. In the late 1990s, the Chinese leadership exerted strong pressure on Turkey to silence and withdraw any government support for these advocates in an effort that was said to be largely successful.
From:http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/04/03/europe/3turkey-torch.php