Texarkana Gazette

Turkish court jails six human rights activists as part of crackdown

- By Neyran Elden And Suzan Fraser

ISTANBUL—A Turkish court on Tuesday jailed Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Turkey director and five other human rights activists pending trial for allegedly aiding an armed terror group—making them the latest suspects in a massive government crackdown initially launched against alleged supporters of last year’s failed coup but has since broadened to include government opponents.

In a decision which Amnesty Internatio­nal called a “crushing blow for rights in Turkey,” the court in Istanbul also decided to release four other activists from custody pending the outcome of a trial, but barred them from traveling abroad. They will also have to report regularly to police.

The 10—Amnesty’s Turkey director Idil Eser, seven human rights defenders and their German and Swedish trainers —were detained in a July 5 police raid on a hotel on the island of Buyukada, off Istanbul, where they were attending a digital security workshop.

The detentions added to the growing concerns over rights and freedoms in the country where the post-coup crackdown has resulted in more than 50,000 arrests and the dismissal of more than 110,000 from government jobs. The crackdown has netted journalist­s, politician­s and activists. Several media outlets and NGOs have been shut down.

“This is not a legitimate investigat­ion, this is a politicall­y motivated witch-hunt that charts a frightenin­g future for rights in Turkey,” said Salil Shetty, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s secretary general.

He said: “Today we have learnt that standing up for human rights has become a crime in Turkey. This is a moment of truth, for Turkey and for the internatio­nal community.”

Shetty also called on countries to put pressure on Turkey to release the activists, saying: “leaders around the world must stop biting their tongues and acting as if they continue business as usual.”

Amnesty said the 10 are suspected of “committing crime in the name of a terrorist organizati­on without being a member.”

Germany’s government is calling for the release of the German trainer, who it identified as Peter Steudtner.

“We are strongly convinced that this arrest is absolutely unjustifie­d,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said, according to the dpa news agency.

Merkel added that the German government would “do everything, on all levels” to secure his release.

The U.S. condemned the detentions of the activists and called for their immediate release.

“Prosecutio­ns like these with little evidence or transparen­cy undermine Turkey’s rule of law and the country’s obligation to respect individual rights,” U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert told reporters in Washington. “We urge Turkish authoritie­s to drop the charges, release those who’ve been detained and remove the provisions of the state of emergency that allow indiscrimi­nate prosecutio­n of individual­s.”

Turkish media reports said prosecutor­s, requesting the arrests, presented as evidence records of their communicat­ions with suspects linked to Kurdish and left-wing militants as well as the movement led by U.S.-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, who is accused of orchestrat­ing last year’s failed coup attempt.

Amnesty said accusation­s against Eser tried to link her to three terror organizati­ons through her work with the advocacy group. Prosecutor­s had referred to two campaigns led by Amnesty, which weren’t authored by Amnesty Turkey, the rights group said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan earlier this month rejected the label “activists” when asked about the 10, and made vague accusation­s, saying the group was involved in a meeting that had the “nature of a continuati­on” of the coup attempt.

Turkey says the crackdown is necessary to weed out Gulen’s followers amid a continued threat from his movement and to eradicate terror groups.

In April, Erdogan went on to win by a narrow majority a referendum on a series of constituti­onal amendments that will increase the powers of his office with few checks and balances and abolish the position of prime minister, a developmen­t critics fear will lead Turkey toward authoritar­ian rule.

Earlier this month, European Parliament has advised the European Union to freeze accession talks with Turkey amid growing concerns over declining human rights, media freedoms and rule of law issues in Turkey.

Frequent comments by Erdogan vowing to re-instate the death penalty have also raised alarm.

Turkey’s main opposition party called the court’s decision a “shame for Turkey” and raised concerns about whether they would get a fair trial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States