More than 100 people were reportedly arrested as a result of protesters and police crash on Saturday at Gezi, Taksim and nearby places, Amnesty International reported. According to Amnesty International, police denied giving details about the whereabouts of the people arrested.

On Sunday, local television news networks showed videos of police medical staff wearing their white clothes and giving medical aid to those injured protesters. The medical staff were handcuffed as they were being dragged away from the people they were treating.

According to Amnesty International, the health ministry of Istanbul declared that the make-shift infirmaries around the area where protests were happening were illegal and doctors attending to those injured can be arrested.

Andrew Gardner, Amnesty International's researcher on Turkey, condemned the arrest, "It is completely unacceptable that doctors should be threatened with prosecution for providing medical attention for people in need, the doctors must be released immediately and any threat to prosecute them removed."

However, Istanbul Governor Huseyin Avni Mutlu said that those arrested were just posing as doctors, "They WORE doctors' white coats but had nothing to do with medicine or health. In fact, one of them had seven separate criminal records for theft."

Meanwhile, reports from Turkish Medical Association said that Gezi Park, Taksim Square and other regions in Istanbul had claimed 4 lives, one police officer included. There were already 7,478 people injured, 5 were in critical condition; there are 91 people suffering head traumas, and 10 people lost their sights as a result of police aiming at protesters faces with rubber bullets.

Also, The Human Rights Association of Turkey reported that as of June 9, there were already 2,448 arrests across 77 cities in Istanbul. This figure includes 48 people arrested just for posting information about the protests through their Twitter accounts.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made excuse about the government's violence towards the peaceful protestors at Gezi Park who set up libraries, community kitchen, infirmary and children's recreation activities. According to the Prime Minister, I did my duty as Prime Minister. Otherwise there would be no point in my being in office." He called the protesters as troublemakers and illegal groups but clarify that he has respect to those protesters with pure environmental agenda.

A lot of the protesters dispersed from the Gezi Park and Taksim Square had not yet returned home for fear that police will be arresting them CTV News reported.

One protester, who refused to be identified for fear of arrest, shared that he and his friends tried to escape the police attacking the Gezi Park and Taksim Square but there were unidentified men who chased after them and tried to beat them with iron bars. He said that they were not able to indentify whether these men belonged to the police force or they were third party group hired to help the police during dispersal.

The protester, who refused to be named, said that they were able to escape the man armed with iron bars through hiding in one of the abandoned apartment buildings. He said that they took refuge in the place until Sunday afternoon.