Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Retired admirals involved in ‘Montreux declaratio­n’ released

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH DESIGNER MUSTAFA ARSLAN

ALL of the 14 retired navy admirals who were detained as a part of the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office investigat­ion regarding the so-called declaratio­n of 104 retired navy admirals on the Montreaux Convention were released yesterday.

After a 4.5-hour investigat­ion led by the prosecutor, admirals Atilla Kezek, Alaettin Sevim, Ramazan Cem Gürdeniz, Nadir Hakan Eraydın, Bülent Olcay, Kadir Sağdıç, Türker Ertürk, Turgay Erdağ and Ali Sadi Ünsal were released from custody. Engin Baykal, Cemil Şükrü Bozoğlu, Mustafa Özbey and Atilla Kıyat, all above the age of 70, could not be questioned in person. Judicial control was requested for 13 other retired admirals. Ergun Mengi, however, was sent to the Criminal Court on Duty with the request for an arrest for writing the declaratio­n and publishing it on the Whastapp group named ADMEK-2.

Investigat­ors also discovered that Mengi texted retired Adm. Ali Yüksel Önel the following: “Thank you very much, my commander, the main reaction will be to the admiral with clogs, removing the interferen­ce of reactionis­m from the military school entrance requiremen­ts and the lessons of Atatürk’s Principles and Revolution­s from the sergeant courses. But establishi­ng a consensus in the group was very difficult. For this reason, I will prepare a statement that includes messages in the last paragraph on the pretext of Montreux.”

Still, after the release of the other 13 admirals, Mengi was also released under judicial control after being referred to court.

During the investigat­ion, the prosecutor also questioned the admirals to determine if there was a hierarchic­al order in the list of signatures in the declaratio­n, in addition to their interrogat­ion at the police station. It was also stated that the admirals were asked whether they removed their signatures as per Article 316/2 of the Turkish Criminal Law (TCK), and the admirals responded that they would not remove their signatures since they did not act with the intention of committing a crime in the first place.

“Getting to this point from such a simple press release is a complete communicat­ion failure but do not ask us to search for the reasons behind this failure. The text is very clear and prepared in good faith. I thank the Turkish judicial system and the police force,” Gürdeniz said in a speech with the press after being released.

After Turkey’s decision last month to withdraw from the Istanbul Convention, a European treaty aimed at preventing and combating violence against women, with a presidenti­al decree, it came into question whether Turkey could withdraw from other internatio­nal agreements the same way. In a TV interview, Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop said that technicall­y it is possible and gave the example of The Montreux Convention Regarding the Regime of the Straits. Following discussion­s about Şentop’s statements, 104 retired admirals released a statement warning the government.

“We are of the opinion to refrain from any kind of rhetoric or action that could make the Montreux Convention ... a matter of controvers­y,” they said.

The Montreux Convention is a 1936 agreement that gives Turkey control over the Bosporus and Dardanelle­s and regulates the transit of naval warships. The convention guarantees the free passage of civilian vessels in times of peace and restricts the passage of naval ships that do not belong to littoral Black Sea states. Signed on July 20, 1936, at the Montreux Palace in Switzerlan­d, the convention gives Turkey permission to remilitari­ze the Bosporus and Dardanelle­s. It went into effect on Nov. 9, 1936, and was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series on Dec. 11, 1936.

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