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REPRESENTATIVES OF BHRC AND KHRP ATTEND TRIAL OF HADEP IN ANKARA | Home |
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| REPRESENTATIVES OF BHRC AND KHRP ATTEND TRIAL OF HADEP IN ANKARA |
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| Tuesday, 06 July 1999 | |
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The Bar Human Rights Committee and the Kurdish Human Rights Project call on Turkey to respect the rights to freedom of expression, freedom of association and the right to receive a fair trial enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights, to which Turkey is a signatory.
On 23rd June 1999, representatives from the Bar Human Rights Committee and the Kurdish Human Rights Project attended the trial of 55 members of HADEP at the State Security Court in Ankara. The trial stems from events in November 1998, following hunger strikes at HADEP offices in response to the detention of PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) leader Abdullah Ocalan in Italy. 3,200 individuals were detained at HADEP offices all over Turkey, following which 55 HADEP members were charged under Article 169 of the Turkish Penal Code for ‘knowingly [giving] shelter, assistance, provisions, arms or ammunition to [an armed] society or band or facilitating their actions’. 18 of the accused, including the President of HADEP, Murat Bozlak, have been refused bail and are still held in custody. Trial under Article 168 of the Penal Code The BHRC and KHRP representatives also attended a trial of 40 HADEP members charged under Article 168 of the Turkish Penal Code in 1997 for producing a calendar allegedly containing PKK propaganda. The calendar contains the names of HADEP members and human rights activists who have disappeared, or who have allegedly been killed by Turkish security forces, over the years. Article 168 deals with the establishment, management and membership of armed societies and gangs. The punishment for executive members is at least twenty-two and a half years, while members face a minimum of fifteen years in jail.
Both trials were adjourned until July 1999. The Court said that it could not proceed because the identities and personal details of the defendants were not before the Court: an extraordinary state of affairs given that many of the defendants have been in custody since November 1998.
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