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The Turkish president's security detail roughed up journalists outside of his event in DC

Apr 1, 2016, 00:55 IST

Photos and videos circulating on Thursday appeared to show chaos erupting as reporters and protesters were waiting outside of a Brookings Institution event where Turkish President Recep Erdogan was due to speak.

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Many journalists said that they were roughed up by Erdogan's security detail before being kicked out of the event, which was hosted by the DC-based think tank.

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The scene was poignant given Erdogan's policy of suppressing media freedoms in Turkey, where hundreds of journalists have been arrested under his administration and accused of having links to terrorism.

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The National Press Club issued a statement on Thursday expressing "alarm" about reports that Erdogan's security personnel had "physically abused journalists" outside the event.

"We have increasingly seen disrespect for basic human rights and press freedom here in Turkey," the statement read. "Erdogan doesn't get to export such abuse."

Inside the event, Erdogan responded to a question about his country's practice of jailing journalists by saying that "only seven of them [in jail] are actually journalists ... and two have ties to terrorists."

He added that while he accepts and encourages criticism, he cannot allow himself to be insulted by the press.

"Insult is not humane ... Criticism is humane," Erdogan told Brookings' Executive Vice President Martin Indyk. "I have seen insults involving my family, my children ... from corruption to theft, anything."

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He added: "Despite all of these developments, the people made me the president."

Protestors rally against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan outside of the Brookings Institution, March 31, 2016 in Washington, DC.Getty

Throughout the event, Erdogan referred to Turkey's democracy more than once in an attempt to justify the policies he was questioned about. Many experts have pointed out, however, that while Turkish elections are free and fair, they are undermined by the lack of free press that is essential to a well-functioning democracy.

Turkey's largest opposition newspaper, Zaman, was seized by Turkish police in a raid on its headquarters earlier this month.

The government takeover of Today's Zaman was evidently in response to Erdogan's perception of the paper as a front for the Gülen movement - a social movement led by a Turkish scholar and preacher, Fethullah Gülen, that is openly critical of Erdogan's government.

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The highly publicized arrest of Can Dündar, editor in chief of leading Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet, was also widely condemned. He and Cumhuriyet's Ankara bureau chief, Erdem Gül, were detained after Cumhuriyet reported that a weapons shipment had been seized at the Turkish border, presumably bound for rebels in Syria.

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