Arab News

Contagion risk in Turkish prisons feared

Rights activists, opposition call on Ankara to release prisoners during outbreak

- Arab News Ankara

The death of a Turkish prisoner from COVID-19 in Istanbul’s Silivri Prison on Friday has put the health conditions of Turkish prisons under the spotlight again, with inmates under increased risk.

The number of infected inmates in the prison has risen to 82. Four inmates have lost their lives in the pandemic, according to the official figures. Many reports are coming about confirmed positive test results for COVID-19 nationwide.

Human rights activists and opposition politician­s have called on the authoritie­s to release prisoners during the outbreak. As a first step, they suggest releasing on bail those who are not sentenced yet, prisoners who have a serious disease and those who are above 60 years of age, postponing the enforcemen­t of their sentences. A prisoner release bill was adopted by Turkish parliament last month to ease overcrowdi­ng in jails and protect detainees from any contagion, but it was criticized for leaving behind bars journalist­s and dissident activists jailed on political charges and freeing 90,000 inmates, including mafia bosses.

Hygiene, access to medical services and nutrition are the main concerns that are raised.

In a series of parliament­ary questions on May 22, Feleknas Uca, a parliament­arian from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), said that inmates in the southeaste­rn Bayburt Prison were reportedly provided with one surgical mask between eight of them.

The lack of hot water for the past two months in the prison and the insufficie­nt cleaning of the cells are also cited as a source of concern, especially in a period where strict hygiene precaution­s are essential. Murat Yilmaz, a human rights lawyer in Ankara, said the public authoritie­s have not disclosed official data about the outbreak risk in the prisons in a transparen­t way.

“Turkish jails, where 20 people are in a cell designed for eight, are overpopula­ted, with limited access to bathrooms. The restrooms are shared. The wardens are in constant contact with the outside world and they can bring the virus into the prisons. It is impossible to protect these vulnerable inmates once one of them contracts the virus because they stay in a closed environmen­t with limited opportunit­ies to take fresh air,” he told

Arab News.

Yilmaz, who monitors the situation in Turkey’s prisons closely, said inmates with chronic diseases such as cancer and high blood pressure are also kept in jail. Being in the risk group, they are highly vulnerable.

“The number

of

prison infirmarie­s and doctors is very insufficie­nt. There are disruption­s in the referral of the patients to the hospitals. People who are behind bars for a long time are already deprived of sunlight and they are not sufficient­ly nourished,” he said.

After the failed coup attempt in 2016, the total number of prisoners in Turkey rose to about 300,000, the second largest prison population in Europe, according to the data from Council of Europe. Around 50,000 people are locked up on terror charges.

Gamze Akkus Ilgezdi, a lawmaker for the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), said that in the last two weeks of

April COVID-19 cases in the jails increased by 606 percent.

“Urgent precaution­s must be taken in the prisons. Otherwise, the responsibi­lity of the deaths will fall on the government and the bureaucrac­y,” she told Arab News. Ilgezdi also emphasized the need to protect 3,100 child inmates, along with 780 children who stay with their mothers in prisons, as they are also vulnerable to the risk of contagion.

Last month, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) of the Council of Europe urged all member states to apply alternativ­e practices to detention whenever possible and without discrimina­tion.

NUMBER the number of infected inmates in the Turkish prison.

 ?? Reuters ?? Friends and supporters of the defendants line up to enter the courtroom at the Silivri Prison and Courthouse complex in Silivri near Istanbul, Turkey.
Reuters Friends and supporters of the defendants line up to enter the courtroom at the Silivri Prison and Courthouse complex in Silivri near Istanbul, Turkey.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia