Bangkok Post

PKK chief jail restrictio­ns ‘not acceptable’

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ANKARA: Restrictio­ns imposed on Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan and a handful of other inmates at a Turkish island prison are not acceptable, an anti-torture group said yesterday, urging he be granted more outside contact and less solitary confinemen­t.

The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) founder, who was initially sentenced to death after his capture by Turkey in 1999 and then to life imprisonme­nt, is jailed on the island of Imrali in the Sea of Marmara off Istanbul.

According to the Council of Europe’s anti-torture committee’s report on a 2019 visit to Turkey, which included rare access to Imrali, he is one of just four prisoners on the island.

The Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) spoke to all prisoners and said they were treated “correctly” by prison warders, will no allegation­s of ill-treatment, while healthcare also appeared good.

But it said the regime the prisoners were under had not improved “at all” since the last such visit in 2016.

It said the four prisoners were still only allowed to meet as a group for six hours per week, and in pairs for another three hours per week, while associatio­n during daily outdoor exercise remained prohibited.

“As a result, all prisoners were being held in solitary confinemen­t for most of the time,” it said, noting this amounted to 159 hours out of 168 hours per week, including 24 hours per day at weekends.

“In the committee’s view, such a state of affairs is not acceptable.”

The CPT lamented an almost total absence of family visits in recent years to Ocalan and the turning down of requests for visits from his lawyers since 2019.

“A balance must be struck between such security considerat­ions and the basic human rights of the prisoners concerned,” it said, calling for a “sustainabl­e system” of regular visits by family members and lawyers at Imrali.

Ocalan — like hundreds others jailed in the wake of a failed 2016 coup bid — is serving what Turkey calls an aggravated life sentence, a life term with added restrictio­ns on the jail routine.

The PKK, considered as a terrorist group by Turkey, the EU and United States, has since 1984 waged an insurrecti­on for greater rights for Kurds.

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