Turkish policeman who tear-gassed ‘Lady in Red’ ordered to plant 600 trees as punishment

An Istanbul court found Fatih Z guilty of causing intentional injury and professional fault and gave him two sentences of 10 months in prison, but quickly cancelled that ruling.

A Turkish riot policeman uses tear gas on Ceyda Sungur during a protest in Istanbul's Gezi Park on May 28, 2013. Osman Orsal / Reuters
Powered by automated translation

ISTANBUL // A Turkish policeman who tear-gassed a female protester at close range in one of the most iconic moments of 2013 anti-government protests has been ordered by a court to plant 600 trees, media reported Thursday.

The tear-gassing of Ceyda Sungur was captured in dramatic images and she became known as the "Lady in Red" around the world.

An Istanbul court found Fatih Z. guilty of causing intentional injury and professional fault and gave him two sentences of 10 months in prison.

However, the court immediately cancelled these terms due to his "good behaviour" during the trial and instead sentenced Fatih Z. to the unusual community punishment of planting 600 saplings and looking after their growth, the Hurriyet daily said.

Ms Sungur had also been targeted by a criminal probe but this was rapidly scrapped by prosecutors.

The May-June 2013 protests started as a local show of anger against plans to develop a small park in central Istanbul.

But they quickly snowballed into a nationwide wave of protest against then premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Eight people were killed, 8,000 wounded and thousands arrested.

Turkish prosecutors opened cases against hundreds of protesters over their conduct, as well as against a handful of police officers.

* Agence France-Presse