HRW: AKP uses 2014 protests as pretext for political crackdown

HRW said: The Turkish government’s willingness to use incarceration to restrict the right to political association and crack down on an opposition party is another worrying sign of the erosion of rights and the rule of law in Turkey."

Human Rights Watch (HRW) commented on Ankara court's decision to detain 17 current and former politicians and officials from the opposition HDP and impose judicial control conditions on three others released from custody.

Tom Porteous, deputy program director at Human Rights Watch, said: “Detaining politicians from a party that won nearly 12 percent of the vote in the 2018 general election is part of the Turkish government’s policy to criminalize political opposition.”

Porteous added: “The last few years provide ample evidence that Turkey’s courts are all too quick to do the government’s bidding, and this is the latest example.”

HRW said: The Turkish government’s willingness to use incarceration to restrict the right to political association and crack down on an opposition party is another worrying sign of the erosion of rights and the rule of law in Turkey."

Police arrested the politicians and officials on September 25, 2020 in connection with an Ankara prosecutor’s investigation of their alleged involvement in protests in southeastern Turkey that turned violent and led to at least 37 deaths.

The protests, between October 6 and October 8, 2014, were a reaction to the Turkish government’s policy at the time toward the ISIS siege of the town of Kobane.

Most of the 20 people accused in the present case were at the time serving members of the central executive committee of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, the party’s main decision-making body. 

HRW said: "The penalty, if convicted for attempting to destroy the unity of the state (separatism), is life in prison without parole. The evidence that the prosecutor has so far presented against the 20 in the ongoing criminal investigation consists of the party’s social media postings on Twitter calling on people to join the October 2014 demonstrations."

Among those detained is Ayhan Bilgen, the popular elected mayor of Kars Municipality in eastern Turkey, HRW recalled adding: "After his detention, the authorities announced that he had been replaced as mayor by the Ankara-appointed governor of the province, part of a government pattern, documented by Human Rights Watch, of replacing the democratically elected mayors from the Peoples’ Democratic Party with their own unelected appointees. The government’s new detention orders are also a pretext for the government’s takeover of another Peoples’ Democratic Party municipality.

Out of the 65 municipalities the party won in the March 31, 2019 local elections, the government has left just six small local councils HDP-controlled. The prosecutor has also applied to lift the parliamentary immunity of seven members of parliament from the party to enable their prosecution in the same criminal investigation.

HRW ended its remarks by reminding that "Selahattin Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ, former co-chairs of the party, who have been in detention since November 2016, are detained in the scope of the same criminal investigation."

The organisation added: "The European Court of Human Rights has already found that Turkey violated several of Selahattin Demirtas’ rights and that his detention is an abuse of power by the Turkish authorities. The court concluded, “It has been established beyond reasonable doubt that the extensions of [Demirtas’s] detention … pursued the predominant ulterior purpose of stifling pluralism and limiting freedom of political debate, which is at the very core of the concept of a democratic society."