Arab News

Turkish journalist Altan released after more than four years

- Arab News

A prominent Turkish journalist was released from jail on Wednesday after being held behind bars for more than four years over charges related to a failed 2016 government coup attempt.

Ahmet Altan, 71, was freed after Turkey’s Court of Cassation, the country’s top appeals court, overturned the conviction against him a day earlier and ordered his release.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled on Tuesday that Turkey violated Altan’s rights to liberty and security, and ordered the country to pay him 16,000 euros ($19,000) in non-pecuniary damages. The top European court also claimed that there was no indication to prove that Altan was involved in a deliberate plan to overthrow the government. “Deprivatio­n of liberty, in particular continued detention, must be based on reasonable suspicion,” the

ECHR ruling said. Altan, who had been incarcerat­ed since September 2016, was previously sentenced to aggravated life imprisonme­nt for trying to “overthrow the constituti­onal order.” He was also accused of “disseminat­ing subliminal messages announcing the military coup” with his televised speeches and writings — charges he always denied.

Altan, an award-winning novelist, is also a former editor in chief of the dissident Taraf newspaper and wrote politicall­y sensitive articles and columns critical of Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and supporting Kurdish rights. Following his appeal, the Court of Cassation had overruled in July 2019 the aggravated prison term and ruled that the novelist should be sentenced for “knowingly aiding an armed terrorist organizati­on” behind the coup attempt.

Altan was then sentenced to 10 years and six months in jail and the court ruled for his release on condition of judicial control, although he was re-arrested soon after as the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office appealed the ruling that set him free.

The case was brought to the Constituti­onal Court on Nov. 21, 2019 as his lawyer cited lack of the necessary conditions for imprisonme­nt, but the applicatio­n was dismissed a year after.

“The release of Ahmet Altan is the best news for freedom of expression coming from Turkey in a long time. However, charges against him continue and his freedom cannot be taken for granted,” Laura Batalla Adam, secretary-general of the European Union Turkey Forum, told Arab News. Batalla-Adam said Altan’s case is only one of many. After last year’s amnesty law in Turkey, tens of thousands of prisoners were released to ease the overcrowdi­ng, but the law exempted political prisoners and dissident journalist­s.

The politicall­y motivated detention of the Turkish novelist has been at the top of the internatio­nal community’s agenda for a long time. Italian journalist and writer Roberto Saviano recently penned an open letter to Altan, saying his incarcerat­ion “must concern us all.” “They took away your freedom. To freeze your words, they locked you up in a cell,” he wrote.

A group of 17 Swedish journalist­s also urged Ankara in February to immediatel­y release Altan. “You can put opponents in jail with Kafkaesque reasons but you can never imprison freedom of expression,” they wrote in a joint declaratio­n.

During last week’s summit in Ankara, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel slammed Turkey for its deteriorat­ing record on human rights and urged Ankara to respect human rights norms if it wants to have stronger ties with the EU.

Tarik Beyhan, campaigns and communicat­ions director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Turkey, said: “Ahmet Altan’s release is great but he should never have been arrested.” He told Arab News: “Better late than never, but his arrest and detention had been politicall­y motivated. He had been put behind bars arbitraril­y, was deprived of his liberty for more than four-and-a-half years solely because he has been perceived as a government critic.” Now attention is shifting toward other politicall­y motivated cases in Turkey, especially the notable incarcerat­ions of Turkish philanthro­pist and businesspe­rson Osman Kavala and Kurdish politician Selahattin Demirtas.

The European top court also ruled for the immediate release of both, although these legally binding decisions have not yet been implemente­d by the Turkish judiciary that is criticized for being insufficie­ntly independen­t of the political sphere.

 ?? AFP ?? Turkish journalist and writer Ahmet Altan, with his children Kerem and Senem, at his home in Istanbul, minutes after he arrived following his release from jail.
AFP Turkish journalist and writer Ahmet Altan, with his children Kerem and Senem, at his home in Istanbul, minutes after he arrived following his release from jail.

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