The "Hirak" initiative, which opposes the Egyptian regime, organized an event in Istanbul's conference hall on Saturday to commemorate the sixth anniversary of the break-up of the Rabaa Al-Adawiya and the Renaissance rally in Cairo in the summer of 2013, which left hundreds of victims and injured.

The event was attended by Yassin Aktay, Advisor to the President of the Turkish Justice and Development Party, and representatives of Arab and Egyptian communities in Istanbul, in cooperation with a number of channels opposed to the Egyptian regime.

"Breaking the sit-in in Rabaa Adawiya is a crime committed against humanity," he said.

Aktay stressed that the world must shame his silence against the crime committed against humanity, pointing out that Turkey opened its arms to receive the Egyptians after the massacre of national and humanitarian motive.

While the coordinator of the initiative "movement" Ammar Fahd - in his speech - that the Egyptian people will not forget the memory of that massacre.

The event sought to remind the world of the names of the victims of the Rabaa Adawiya sit-in.

For his part, said the director of the channel "McMillen" Egyptian opposition to the regime Ahmed Al-Shanaf that the fourth anniversary "will not be self-flogging, but is a station for evaluation and correction and work with all necessary efforts."

A group of Egyptian, Arab and Turkish singers also performed a fourth anniversary song entitled "Joana Ruh Epic".

The Hirak Initiative, which was launched days before the sixth anniversary of the dissolution, defines itself through its Facebook page as an initiative of a group of Egyptian youth and institutions abroad, concerned with organizing events and adopting special initiatives on Egyptian affairs.

On August 14, 2013, Egyptian army and police forces broke up the supporters of Mohamed Morsi, the first elected civilian president, in the fields of Rabaa El Adawiya and Nahdet Misr in Greater Cairo.

The disengagement resulted in 632 deaths, including eight police, according to the National Council for Human Rights (government), while local and international (unofficial) human rights organizations said the death toll exceeded 1,000.