X
    Categories: 2022

Turkey: Human Rights Defender on Trial

Human Rights Watch



[Co-chair of Country’s Oldest Rights Group Faces Terrorism Prosecution]
Feb. 21, 2022

(Istanbul) – The prosecution of a human rights defender demonstrates
the Erdoğan government’s policy of bringing baseless criminal charges
against people involved in legitimate and peaceful civil society
activities, Human Rights Watch said today.

Öztürk Türkdoğan, co-chair of the Human Rights Association, Turkey’s
oldest human rights group, is scheduled to stand trial in Ankara on
February 22, 2022, on charges of “membership in a terrorist
organization.” If convicted, he could face a sentence of 5 to 10 years
in prison. Türkdoğan is also being prosecuted in two other trials on
charges of “insulting” the interior minister and “insulting the
Turkish nation, Republic of Turkey, state institutions and bodies,”
each with a possible penalty of up to two years in prison. All
indictments against him were prepared in December 2021.

“The prosecution of Öztürk Türkdoğan, the long-term co-chair of the
Human Rights Association, is an attempt to criminalize legitimate
human rights work and the right to free speech,” said Hugh Williamson,
Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The fact that
Ankara prosecutors prepared three indictments against Türkdoğan in a
single month for speeches and statements that do not advocate violence
and were made over several years, points to a political order from
above behind these criminal proceedings.”

On March 19, 2021, police briefly detained Türkdoğan from his home,
searching his house and confiscating his laptop and phone. He was
later released with a travel ban imposed on him.

The evidence in the indictment charging Türkdoğan with “membership in
a terrorist organization,” the most serious charge he faces, consists
of Türkdoğan’s speeches, statements, and conversations in his capacity
as the co-chair of the Human Rights Association. The indictment cites
nine broadcasts in which the ANF Kurdish media outlet included clips
of Türkdoğan making public statements on various dates between March
2015 to January 2020.

The statements include calls to end the prolonged solitary confinement
of Abdullah Öcalan, the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK), and other prisoners, and relate to hunger strikes by prisoners
supporting the lifting of solitary confinement. Other evidence cited
in the indictment includes seven phone calls on various dates in 2019,
four with media outlets or journalists.

The indictment also cites three photographs found on Türkdoğan’s
laptop showing banners prepared by the Human Rights Association. Two
protest solitary confinement in prisons and the treatment of sick
prisoners and a third calls for the recognition of Saddam Hussein’s
Anfal campaign in Iraqi Kurdistan in the 1980s as a genocide against
Kurds. The indictment also asserts that Türkdoğan transferred money
“to persons subject to legal processes in connection with terrorist
organization membership,” an allegation he denies.

The two other indictments were prepared by different Ankara
prosecutors. One concerns a statement made on April 24, 2017, by the
Human Rights Association on its website calling for an end to Turkey’s
denial of the Armenian genocide. The prosecutor alleges the statement
exceeds the limits of freedom of expression and amounts to the offense
of “insulting the Turkish nation, the state of the Republic of Turkey,
state institutions and bodies” under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
Code.

The third indictment accuses Türkdoğan of “insulting” Interior
Minister Süleyman Soylu, under article 125 of the Turkish Penal Code
on the basis of a February 18, 2021 statement on the Human Rights
Association website responding to the minister’s harsh criticism of
the association in a parliamentary speech.

“The Turkish authorities should ensure that all charges against Öztürk
Türkdoğan are dropped immediately,” Williamson said. “The government
should stop harassing human rights defenders and ensure that they can
carry out their legitimate activities without fear of reprisals,
arrest, and abusive criminal proceedings.”



 

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS