Sönmez presented a picture of 15-year-old Berkin Elvan who was hit by a tear gas canister thrown by Turkish police during Gezi Park protests in Istanbul in June 2013 and died 269 days later after falling into a coma in March 2014. The boy was not involved in the protest campaign and was just an innocent passer-by, heading to a nearby store to buy bread for his family.
The photo is a part of a display in an outdoor exhibition at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva. The caption on it says: "My name is Berkin Elvan. The police have killed me on behalf of the Turkish Prime Minister."
Zwitserland heeft maling aan eis Erdoğan om foto #Gezi-symbool #BerkinElvan te verwijderen https://t.co/x643rqsQxy pic.twitter.com/71WhKYd1tZ
— Hakan Büyük (@hakbuyuk) 26. April 2016
#Türkiye, #BerkinElvan'ın fotoğrafına da karşı https://t.co/1hi8VUhlJ7https://t.co/Fd0L6YMZPy pic.twitter.com/fZFhTwGVAR
— Sputnik Türkiye (@sputnik_TR) 25. April 2016
The boy's death fueled sharp criticism against Erdogan and the behavior of the Turkish police. Recently, when the photo was exhibited in public, Turkish authorities demanded the picture be taken down, Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reported.
The demand is another sign of Turkey's continuing crackdown on freedom of expression. Since taking his office in the summer of 2014, Erdogan repeatedly suppressed critical remarks about his policies and initiated around 2,000 criminal proceedings against Turkish citizens on the charges of allegedly insulting the head of the state.
In last few weeks, the Turkish leader even went further, forcing the German government to start a criminal prosecution against German journalist Jan Böhmermann. In his TV show, the satirist performed a poem, harshly criticizing the Turkish President for repression of the Kurds and violations of human rights.