Tahir Elci, one of the country's best-known advocates for Kurdish rights, was killed yesterday in a gun battle between police and unidentified gunmen in southeastern city of Diyarbakir while making a statement calling for calm. Two police were also killed.
The death of Elci, who was the head of Diyarbakir Bar Association, triggered protests from Diyarbakir to Istanbul, where police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse the demonstrators.
Many colleagues including Metin Feyzioglu, head of the Turkish Bar Association, carried his coffin, while prayers and slogans echoed from the crowd, who had gathered behind a huge black banner that read: "We will never forget you."
"Martyrs do not die, Tahir Elci is immortal," demonstrators chanted in Kurdish.
Elci was killed by a single bullet to his head, but it was not clear whether the attack directly targeted the lawyer or whether he died in the crossfire during shooting between the assailants and police.
Elci had in October been released pending trial in October after being detained over an an interview in which he said the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), was not a "terrorist" organisation.
He risked up to seven years in prison if convicted on charges of "justifying terrorism".
A hugely prominent figure in legal circles in southeast Turkey, Elci had defended three reporters for the US-based news organisation Vice News after they were detained in Diyarbakir in August.
Turkey's southeast has been hit by the worst violence in years after a two-year old ceasefire between the Turkish government and the PKK, considered a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, collapsed in July.
