Dozens detained in police attack on Saturday Mothers

Dozens of human rights activists and relatives of disappeared persons were detained during the Saturday Mothers' action against enforced disappearances in state custody.

Saturday Mothers have continued their action in Istanbul for their relatives who disappeared in state custody and the punishment of the perpetrators for the 958th week. Despite a contrary ruling by the Turkish Constitutional Court, the initiative was again denied access to their ancestral rally site in front of the Galatasaray High School on Istiklal Avenue.

The Galatasaray Square in front of the high school of the same name in the central district of Beyoğlu, where the Saturday Mothers' sit-in was to take place, was widely cordoned off by police barriers. Galatasaray Square is considered a symbolic place for the struggle for human rights in Turkey.

The Saturday Mothers were supported today by parliamentarians from the Green Left Party, the Democratic Regions Party (DBP) and the Workers' Party of Turkey (TIP), including HDP c-chairs Pervin Buldan and Mithat Sancar, as well as DBP co-chair Keskin Bayindir, Green Left Party MPs Sırrı Süreyya Önder and Meral Danış Beştaş and former HDP MP Musa Piroğlu. The parliamentary group was stopped and surrounded by police on their way to Galatasaray Square.

Denying access to the square, the police staged a violent crackdown on the crowd and detained
dozens of people, while members of parliament were surrounded by police.


In 1995, women in Istanbul took to the streets for the first time to draw attention to relatives who had been arrested and then disappeared. Since a large-scale attack on the Saturday Mothers ordered by the Ministry of Interior in the summer five years ago, Galatasaray Square has been a no-go zone for the Saturday Mothers. But this is contrary to the right to freedom of assembly and demonstration, ruled the Turkish Constitutional Court on 22 February 2023, rejecting the ministry's objection that the Saturday Mothers threatened the "protection of public order". "Everyone has the right to take part in unarmed and peaceful assemblies and demonstrations without prior permission," says Article 34 of the Turkish Constitution, which the security authorities violated by banning the Saturday Mothers' forcefully dispersed action in August 2018 and all subsequent ones. The blockade of the square is therefore invalid, said the court ruling. The Turkish Interior Ministry and the Istanbul police ignore the ruling and continue to violently crack down on Saturday Mothers.