Security personnel gather, backdropped by a large picture of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as they prepare for his arrival in Ankara, Turkey, Sunday, June 9, 2013. Tens of thousands of people thronged Istanbul's Taksim Square Saturday, and thousands more turned out in central Ankara as protests that have presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with the first serious challenge to his leadership entered their second week. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
Security personnel gather, backdropped by a large picture of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as they prepare for his arrival in Ankara, Turkey, Sunday, June 9, 2013. Tens of thousands of people thronged Istanbul's Taksim Square Saturday, and thousands more turned out in central Ankara as protests that have presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with the first serious challenge to his leadership entered their second week. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
Protesters gather at the Gezi Park of Taksim Square in Istanbul Sunday, June 9, 2013. Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has given a speech making it clear that he has no intention of backing down in the face of 10 days of anti-government protesters. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)
Supporters wave flags backdropped by a large picture of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as they wait for his arrival in Ankara, Turkey, Sunday, June 9, 2013. Tens of thousands of people thronged Istanbul's Taksim Square Saturday, and thousands more turned out in central Ankara as protests that have presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with the first serious challenge to his leadership entered their second week. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)
A youth protester paints a destroyed bus at a barricade near the Taksim Square in Istanbul Sunday, June 9, 2013. Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has given a speech making it clear that he has no intention of backing down in the face of 10 days of anti-government protesters. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)
A street vendor adjusts his flags and banners with portraits of Turkey's founder Kemal Ataturk that reads: 'Happy is the person who calls himself a Turk', in Ankara's Kugulu Park, Sunday June 9, 2013. Tens of thousands of people thronged Istanbul's Taksim Square Saturday, and thousands more turned out in central Ankara as protests that have presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with the first serious challenge to his leadership entered their second week. (AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici)
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ? Turkey's prime minister climbed on top of a bus to give a fiery speech to thousands of his supporters Sunday, challenging increasingly angry anti-government protesters to beat his party at the ballot box after they also flooded the streets for a 10th day of demonstrations.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan traveled to two cities where unrest has occurred and again condemned his detractors as "a handful of looters" and vandals.
In the southern city of Adana, where pro- and anti-government protesters clashed Saturday night, Erdogan greeted supporters from the top of a bus before lashing out at his opponents in the highly polarized country.
"We won't do what a handful of looters have done. They burn and destroy. ... They destroy the shops of civilians. They destroy the cars of civilians," Erdogan told supporters who had greeted him at Adana airport. "They are low enough to insult the prime minister of this country."
He urged his supporters to avoid violence themselves and predicted that his Islamic-rooted party would defeat his opponents during local elections in March.
"I want you to give them the first lesson through democratic means in the ballot box," he said.
The nationwide anti-government protests were sparked by outrage over police use of force against an environmental protest in Istanbul on May 31, and have grown into a display of discontent toward Erdogan's government. Many accuse the prime minister of becoming increasingly authoritarian after 10 years in power and of trying to impose his conservative, religious mores in the country which is governed by secular laws.
Erdogan has rejected the accusations, insisting he respects all lifestyles and is the "servant" of his people.
Erdogan has repeatedly branded the protests as illegal efforts to discredit his government ahead of local elections next year. He frequently refers to the 50 percent majority he received in elections in 2011 to dismiss the protest as attempts by a minority group to dominate over a majority of his supporters.
"As long as you walk with us, the Justice and Development Party administration will stand strong," Erdogan said, referring to his party. "As long as there is life in my body, your prime minister and your party chairman, God willing, will not be deterred by anything."
He then traveled to the city of Mersin, where anti-protests have been held, to make a similar speech and to open new sports facilities, where he defended his government's democratic credentials, and criticized protesters for not taking to the streets to defend the rights of female students who were barred from studying at Turkish universities because of bans enforced by previous governments on Islamic-style headscarves.
"What did you do for the freedom of those who couldn't go to universities?" he said.
Later Sunday, Erdogan was scheduled to travel to Ankara, the capital, where thousands supporters were preparing to greet him in a show of force.
Erdogan's refusal to moderate his tone caused dismay in Ankara, where thousands of protesters again gathered in a central square close to government offices, a day after police used tear gas and water cannons to oust them from the area.
"As the prime minister continues (with) his harsh style, the resistance also continues and is getting bigger," said Cagdas Ersoy,?a 23-year-old student who joined the protests in Ankara's Kizilay square. "He is making the resistance bigger without realizing it."
Protester Cihan Akburun said: "He should not provoke the people. We invite everyone to common sense."
Tens of thousands of protesters gathered in Istanbul's Taksim Square, where a violent police crackdown on a sit-in to prevent the demolition of its Gezi Park sparked the unrest. The government has vowed to go ahead with plans to redevelop Taksim, replacing the park with a replica Ottoman barracks. It has since backed away from plans to build a shopping mall.
In Adana late Saturday, a pro-government group hurled stones at marching anti-government demonstrators, the state-run Anadolu Agency said. Police evacuated women and children, but the two groups continued to clash with stones and batons.
It was the second time in the last 10 days of protests that pro- and anti- demonstrated had fought with one another. On Thursday, party supporters attacked about 30 protesters in the city of Rize, on Turkey's Black Sea coast.
Three people have died in the protests, including a police officer in Adana who fell into an underpass that was under construction while chasing demonstrators. thousands have been injured so far
Erdogan said the demonstrators had "martyred" the police officer and defended the law enforcement officers, dismissing calls by some protesters that officers engaged in abuse be sacked.
"We won't sacrifice our police to their wishes," he said. "We cannot leave the streets for anarchists and terrorists to roam."
The government had previously apologized for the excessive force used to roust the environmental protesters.
Erdogan blamed the protests on forces he said were trying to prevent Turkey's rise.
"There are those who cannot stomach Turkey becoming greater and stronger," Erdogan said. "They don't want any investments in Turkey."
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