Thousands of people have gathered in Istanbul for the funeral of a 15-year-old boy who died nine months after being injured during Turkish anti-government protests.
Berkin Elvan's death on Tuesday led to protests in cities across the country.
President Abdullah Gul appealed for calm ahead of the funeral.
The boy was injured while walking to buy bread in Istanbul in June, when he was 14. He was hit on the head by a tear gas canister during the unrest.
Correspondents say his 269 days in a coma gripped the country and became a symbol of the heavy-handed tactics used by police to rein in the biggest demonstrations against Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Thousands of mourners began arriving early on Wednesday in the streets near an Alevi Muslim prayer hall, known as a Cemevi, in the Okmeydan area of Istanbul.
The crowds chanted, clapped and shouted the teenager's name.
After the funeral at the Cemevi, a march is due to take place in the centre of the city. News of Berkin Elvan's death - the eighth linked to mass anti-government protests - triggered demonstrations in several Turkish cities the previous day.

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The BBC's Selin Girit witnesses Tuesday night's clashes in Istanbul
In Ankara, police fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse some 2,000 protesters who chanted: "Government of Erdogan, government of corruption, resign, resign."
Police pursued protesters into side streets where small clashes continued.
The photo of a crying mother, her head thrown back in anguish, is splashed across the front pages of many of Turkey's privately-owned daily newspapers.
"The grief of all of us" headlines the centrist daily Vatan while the leftist Karsi proclaims: "We all know the murderer".
Other papers quote the words of Berkin's mother. "[PM] Erdogan has taken my son", reads the headlines of Evrensel, Aydinlik and Yurt newspapers.
The front page of Turkey's mass-circulation Hurriyet simply states: "We are mourning". In a commentary, writer Taha Akyol wonders: "If even the life of a youngster can't be our 'common value', what values do we have left to keep us together?"
And Mehves Evin in Milliyet says that "Today, holding bread in our hands, we will commemorate Berkin and all innocent children who were sacrificed to state violence."
But for some of the pro-government papers - such as Yeni Akit and Sabah - it is business as usual, with pictures of Erdogan's election campaign filling the front pages.
There was similar police action against thousands of protesters on both the European and Asian sides of Istanbul and in the cities of Mersin and Adana.
'Fabricated'The June protests started as a gathering to save an Istanbul park, but they quickly grew into a nationwide movement against the government of Mr Erdogan, which critics say has become increasingly authoritarian and corrupt.
The sons of three former cabinet ministers have been arrested and accused of corruption, while Mr Erdogan himself has condemned as fabricated an audio recording that appears to show him talking to his son about hiding large sums of money.
He said last month that the recording, allegedly tapped and then posted on social media, was a "treacherous attack".
It appears to reveal Mr Erdogan asking his son Bilal to dispose of millions of euros in cash from a house.
The prime minister says the corruption allegations are part of a plot to unseat him by US-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen - a former ally who is thought to have millions of followers in Turkey.
President Gul sent a message of condolence to Elvan's family, saying that Turkey was going through difficult days and that the "mind of the state has become overwhelmed by anger and hatred".
"This atmosphere of hatred is undermining society's need for love and peace and efforts to understand one another," he said. "Little 15-year old Berkin Elvan is the latest victim of this atmosphere."
After the boy's death was announced, his mother appeared outside Okmeydani hospital and was quickly surrounded by mourners. Tributes appeared on social media and hundreds of people gathered to show their anger.
Riot police soon arrived at the scene and protesters attacked one of their vehicles.
BBC Turkish correspondent Rengin Arslan said many in the crowd believed the police had not turned up at the hospital to ensure the safety of mourners but to make things worse.
Further protests were reported in the coastal cities of Antalya and Izmir and in the capital, Ankara, where students boycotted classes and staged sit-ins.
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