The Borneo Post

Turkish court releases 8 activists on bail in terrorism trial

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ISTANBUL: A Turkish court on Wednesday ordered the release on bail of eight human rights activists, including the director of the local branch of Amnesty Internatio­nal, pending a verdict in their trial on terrorism charges.

The case against the activists, who number 11 in total and who face up to 15 years in prison if found guilty, has become a flashpoint in Turkey’s tension with Europe and heightened concern that an important Nato member is sliding further towards authoritar­ianism under President Tayyip Erdogan.

Among those ordered to be released were Idil Eser, the director of Amnesty in Turkey, as well as Peter Steudtner, a German national, and Ali Gharavi, a Swede. Under the terms of their release, Steudtner and Gharavi are not required to remain in Turkey before the next court date on Nov 22.

Two other act ivists were released on bail prior to the start of Wednesday’s trial. Another, Amnesty’s local chairman, is being held in the coastal province of Izmir where he faces charges in a separate case.

“It is a happy developmen­t that our friends are released, but this case should have never been brought,” said one of the defence lawyers, Erdal Dogan.

“We need a state of law and we need the support of our citizens.”

Almost all of the activists were detained in July after participat­ing in a workshop on digital security held on an island off the coast of Istanbul.

The prosecutor has alleged a range of charges, including helping the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and the network of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, accused by Ankara of engineerin­g last year’s coup attempt.

Eser had earlier told the court that she had been arrested for doing her

It is a happy developmen­t that our friends are released, but this case should have never been brought

job.

“I don’t understand how I can be associated with three different terrorist organisati­ons by having attended a workshop,” she said. “I don’t have anything to regret. I just did my work as a human rights defender.”

Anotheracc­used,OzlemDalki­ran, a member of the Turkish arm of the Citizens’ Assembly, a European rights group, told the court: “I have no idea why we’re here.”

The prosecutor has cited Amnesty’s links to jailed hunger strikers and alleged that some of the defendants had contact with people who had downloaded the encrypted messaging app used by the coup plotters.

Authoritie­s have jailed more than 50,000 people pending trial in a crackdown following the failed military coup. Erdogan says the purges across society are necessary to maintain stability in a key Nato country bordering Iran, Iraq and Syria.

European allies fear he is using the investigat­ions to check opposition and undermine the judiciary.

The case has worsened Turkey’s already fraught relations with the European Union, which it aspires to join. Shortly after the arrests, Germany said it was reviewing Turkey’s applicatio­ns to buy weaponry from Germany. A cabinet minister in Berlin compared Ankara’s behaviour to that of the former Communist East Germany.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Turkey’s 12-year-old attempt to join the European Union should be halted, although Ankara has said it remains determined to press on with its accession process. — Reuters

Erdal Dogan, defence lawyers

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 ??  ?? Eser (centre) is welcomed by colleagues after her release from Silivri prison in Istanbul. — AFP photo
Eser (centre) is welcomed by colleagues after her release from Silivri prison in Istanbul. — AFP photo

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