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Turkey's Greens protest Erdogan's airport plans

The world's biggest airport is planned for Istanbul and will come at an ecological cost.
TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY PHILIPPE ALFROY 
A man, standing next to a tree with the Black Sea in the background, looks towards the area where Istanbul's third airport will be build, on February 20, 2014, north of Istanbul. This airport, already considered the "world's largest", is a symbol of major construction developments led by Turkey's Prime Minister and former Mayor Recep Tayyip Erdogan. AFP PHOTO / OZAN KOSE
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Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson Airport served 94.5 million passengers in 2012, making it the highest-capacity airport in the world. Keeping this in mind gives one an idea of the sheer magnitude of the third Istanbul airport, which is being planned to accommodate 150 million passengers annually.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan personally broke ground for the new airport on June 7. Most of his speech on the occasion was reserved for criticizing and reprimanding those who oppose the project. According to Erdogan, certain groups in Turkey — under the pretext of protecting the environmen and preserving ecological systems — are trying to block the major steps his Justice and Development Party government is taking to promote growth for Turkey and its economy.

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