Turkish police detain 13 academics, activists in raids
Turkish police have detained 13 academics, activists and journalists over links to a jailed businessman and human rights defender, and allegations that they sought to topple the government by supporting mass protests during 2013, Turkey’s state-run news agency reported Friday.
Anadolu Agency said professors Betul Tanbay and Turgut Tarhanli of Istanbul’s Bosphorus and Bilgi universities, and journalist Cigdem Mater were among those detained in simultaneous police operations in Istanbul and in three provinces.
They were being questioned over their links to the Anatolia Culture Association founded by Osman Kavala, a philanthropist businessman who was arrested a year ago and accused of attempts to “abolish” the constitutional order and the government. No indictment has been issued against him.
Anadolu said police are searching for seven other people linked to the association, which says it aims to promote peace and minority rights through culture.
The group is suspected of trying to bring down the government by fomenting “chaos and disorder” through their alleged involvement in efforts to expand anti-government protests that grew from opposition to the cutting down of trees at Istanbul’s Gezi Park. Authorities suspect that Kavala used the association, as well as a foundation that he also headed, to finance and organize efforts to broaden the protests, the agency reported.
The detentions drew criticism from the European Union, which called the development “alarming,” and from human rights groups.
“The repeated detentions of critical voices and the continued widespread pressure on civil society representatives run counter to the Turkish government’s declared commitment to human rights and to fundamental freedoms,” the EU said a statement.
Amnesty International’s Turkey Strategy and Research Manager Andrew Gardner said: “This latest wave of detentions of academics and activists, on the basis of absurd allegations, shows that the authorities are intent on continuing their brutal crackdown of independent civil society.”