Published on 12:00 AM, July 17, 2016

Defiant Turks stood firm

Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan speaks via Facetime to address the nation during the attempted coup, in Marmais, Turkey , yesterday. Photo: Reuters

Troops filed into Taksim Square uncertain of how they would be received. Before long, angry crowds had gathered to denounce them.

In the famous square where anti-government protests took hold in 2013, a huge crowd chanted against the putsch, draped with Turkish flags across their shoulders.

The scenes were reminiscent of the mass demonstrations three years ago against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was then prime minister.

But this time, the crowds were on his side -- and it was the military, badly outnumbered at a hundred against a thousand, who were the target of their ire.

"Military get out," they chanted, crowding around a monument that marks the birth of the Turkish republic almost a century ago.

"The people are afraid of a military government," said Dogan, 38. "Most of them have been in military service -- they know what a military government would mean."

As a helicopter flew overhead the crowd began to boo, shaking their fists at the night sky.

Then there was horror as the soldiers opened fire.

At least three people were hit. One man lay bloodied on the ground. Ambulances arrived, their blue lights illuminating the angry faces of the crowd.

"The military, they did this! Murderers!" screamed one man above the shouts of the crowd.

Minutes later riot police poured out of trucks, brandishing their shields and clearing the space. Smatterings of gunfire echoed across the almost empty square.

Soldiers also opened fire at thousands of civilians trying to cross the Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge across the Bosphorus by foot, leaving tens of people injured.

Shops had closed hurriedly as news of the coup attempt broke. Parts of Istanbul were left looking like a ghost town, and it was not until hours later that the crowds took to the streets, possibly heeding a call by Erdogan for the public to come out and resist the coup.

But at one bar at least, a group of young men stayed defiantly in their seats, saying they would not leave their tables or their drinks. No military coup would stop them enjoying a Friday night in Besiktas, a neighbourhood on Istanbul's European side. As helicopters flew above and eyes darted nervously upwards, proud Besiktas resident Ali said he did not want his country to suffer the latest in a string of coups since 1960.

"This country has seen so many coups, I am against them. It will not work," he said as he showed off his Ataturk tattoo, expressing his love for the secularist founder of modern Turkey.

It was a dark night but it brought a bright new morning for democracy in Turkey.

The people of Turkey proved courageous. They came out on to the streets and demanded that political disputes be settled through political means and democratic procedures.

The vast majority of people of all political persuasions rejected this violent campaign, and all of the political parties represented in parliament opposed it.

The call from a divisive Erdogan, met with people's response. As a result, the coup attempt hasn't survived even for a day.