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U.S. Department of State
Turkey Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
February 26, 1998
TURKEY
Turkey is a constitutional republic with a multiparty Parliament, the Grand
National Assembly, which elects the President. In 1993 it elected Suleyman
Demirel President. In November Prime Minister Mesut Yilmaz, leader of the
Motherland Party (ANAP), resigned after 17 months in office following a no-
confidence vote in Parliament concerning corruption allegations. In
January 1999, President Demirel asked Prime Minister-designate Bulent
Ecevit, leader of the Democratic Left Party (DSP), to form a new
government. The military exercises substantial but indirect influence over
politics in the belief that they are the constitutional protectors of the
state. The Government respects the Constitution's provisions for an
independent judiciary.
For over a decade, Turkey has engaged in armed conflict with the terrorist
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), whose goal is a separate state of Kurdistan
in southeastern Turkey. A state of emergency, declared in 1987, continues
in six southeastern provinces that face substantial PKK terrorist violence.
A regional governor for the state of emergency has authority over the
regular governors in the six provinces, and six adjacent ones, for security
matters. The state of emergency allows the regional governor to exercise
certain quasi-martial law powers, including restrictions on the press and
removal from the area of persons whose activities are deemed detrimental to
public order. The state of emergency decree was renewed for 4 months in
November.
The Turkish National Police (TNP) have primary responsibility for security
in urban areas, while the Jandarma (gendarmerie) carry out this function in
the countryside. The armed forces continued to combat the PKK in the state
of emergency region, thereby taking on an internal security function.
Although civilian and military authorities remain publicly committed to the
rule of law and respect for human rights and continued education for law
enforcement personnel in these subjects, members of the security forces,
particularly police "special teams," Jandarma, village guards, and TNP
personnel, committed serious human rights abuses.
Export-led growth continued to fuel the countryâs market economy. Trade
with the European Union constitutes 60 percent of overall foreign trade.
Leading exports were textiles, iron, and steel, but exports of electronics
equipment, consumer goods, food, and auto parts continued to grow. The
Government made progress toward agreement on an east-west energy corridor
to bring Caspian Basin oil and natural gas to world markets through
pipelines across Turkey. However, despite market resilience, overall
economic growth slowed sharply during the year due to an outflow of foreign
capital in the wake of the Russian financial crisis and budget expenditure
control and skillful monetary and exchange-rate policy. The Yilmaz-led
Government lowered wholesale inflation from 91 percent in 1997 to 54
percent in 1998. Yet inflation continued at a level that exacerbated
income disparities: per capita Gross National Product (GNP) of $3,100 did
not reflect wide differences in income. The Governmentâs inability to pass
most of its structural reform package or to remove lingering barriers to
foreign direct investment acted as a further drag on economic performance,
as did large off-budget expenditures by the military. Financial corruption
continued to undermine popular faith in the central government.
Despite Prime Minister Yilmaz's stated commitment that human rights would
be his government's highest priority in 1998, serious human rights abuses
continued. There is a general recognition, including by the Government,
that the country's human rights performance is inadequate and needs to be
brought in line, not only with its international obligations and
commitments, but also with popular aspirations and demands and the
Government's own policies.
Extrajudicial killings, including deaths in detention from the excessive
use of force, "mystery killings," and disappearances continued. Torture
remained widespread. Police and Jandarma antiterror personnel often abused
detainees and employed torture during incommunicado detention and
interrogation. The implementation of reforms to address these problems was
uneven. Protracted investigations and trials of officials suspected of
abuses continued to be a problem. Important cases dating back several
years continued without resolution, including: 48 police officers charged
with the 1996 death of journalist Metin Goktepe; 10 police officers from
Manisa charged with torturing 16 persons in 1995--mostly teenagers accused
of ties to a leftist terrorist organization; and police and security
personnel charged with beating to death 10 prisoners during a prison
disturbance in Diyarbakir in 1996.
Despite an increase in prosecutions through October, the rarity of
convictions and the light sentences imposed on police and other security
officials for killings and torture fostered a climate of impunity that
probably remains the single largest obstacle to reducing human rights
abuses. The lack of universal and immediate access to an attorney by those
detained for political crimes is also a major factor in the commission of
torture by police and other security forces.
Prison conditions are poor. Numerous small-scale disturbances and hunger
strikes erupted throughout the year. Security forces continued to use
arbitrary arrest and detention. Prolonged pretrial detention and lengthy
trials continued to be problems. The Government infringed on citizensâ
privacy rights.
Limits on freedom of speech and of the press remained another serious
problem. For example, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reported
that 25 journalists were imprisoned at year's end. Authorities banned or
confiscated numerous publications and raided newspaper offices, encouraging
self-censorship on reporting on the southeast.
The Government continued to use the 1991 Anti-Terror Law, with its broad
and ambiguous definition of terrorism, to detain both alleged terrorists
and others on the charge that their acts, words, or ideas constituted
dissemination of separatist propaganda. Prosecutors also used Article 312
of the Criminal Code (incitement to racial or ethnic enmity), Article 159
(insulting the Parliament, army, republic, or judiciary), the law to
protect Ataturk (no. 5816), and Article 16 of the Press Law to limit
freedom of expression.
A campaign against "reactionaries" (Islamists) and "separatists" (pro-
Kurdish activists)--groups that the military publicly identified as the
principal threats to Turkey's national security--continued throughout the
year and broadened to include mainstream secular journalists, nonviolent
leaders of human rights groups, some devout politicians in mainline
conservative parties, and religiously observant Muslim businessmen.
Members of the legal pro-Kurdish People's Democracy Party (HADEP) were
sometimes the object of arbitrary arrests and often were harassed in the
southeast for their legal political activities. The campaign against pro-
Kurdish activists intensified after the November arrest in Italy of PKK
leader Abdullah Ocalan, when some HADEP members expressed support for
Ocalan. Authorities detained a large number of HADEP members, and party
leaders allege that many were tortured or beaten. An 18-year-old party
member died in police custody, allegedly from beatings during
interrogation. At yearâs end the party faced closure by the authorities
for alleged anticonstitutional activities. (Two of HADEP's predecessors,
HEP and DEP, were closed on similar grounds.)
In January as part of the intense private and public campaign of pressure
led by the military and the judiciary, with broad support from several
segments of society that view "fundamentalism" to be a threat to the
secular republic, the Constitutional Court ordered the Islamist Refah Party
closed and banned several of its leaders, including former Prime Minister
Erbakan, from political activity for 5 years. The National Security
Council continued to warn against Islamist activities. Istanbul mayor and
prominent Islamist political leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan's 10-month
sentence in April on charges of promoting separatism and threatening the
unity of the state was upheld in September. The sentence carries a
lifetime ban from politics.
Kurdish-language broadcasts were not allowed. Printed material in Kurdish,
while legal, was limited. Private channel television programs and print
media continued to debate human rights and other issues of freedom of
speech and the press, but the Government periodically closed down stations
that aired programs in Kurdish or on Kurdish issues. Kurdish music
recordings reportedly were widely available in the southeast.
The Government and the law impose limits on freedom of assembly and
association. Starting in May police with increasing frequency and force
broke up public gatherings of the Saturday Mothers, a group that has held
weekly vigils in Istanbul for more than 3 years to protest the
disappearances of their relatives.
Government officials continued to harass, intimidate, indict, and imprison
human rights monitors, journalists, and lawyers for ideas that they
expressed in public forums. The Diyarbakir and Sanliurfa branches of the
Human Rights Association (HRA), which were shut down in 1997, remained
closed. In December a third branch, in Mardin, was closed. In October the
Court of Appeals affirmed the 1997 conviction of Akin Birdal, HRAâs
president, on charges of inciting hatred and enmity, for statements he made
about the Kurdish problem and torture. Other HRA organizers also faced
charges of promoting separatism or inciting ethnic hatred based on
speeches. In May Birdal was wounded seriously in a murder attempt. A
Jandarma sergeant and 10 other suspects were put on trial in connection
with the attack.
The Government continued to impose some restrictions on religious
minorities. Discrimination against women persisted. Spousal abuse remains
a serious problem, and the Parliament passed legislation making it illegal.
Some abuse of children, discrimination against minorities, and child labor
remained serious problems. Nongovernmental organizations led a public
awareness campaign to call attention to child labor.
The situation in the southeast remained a serious concern. The Government
has long denied the Kurdish population, located largely in the southeast,
basic political, cultural, and linguistic rights. As part of its fight
against the PKK, the Government forcibly displaced noncombatants, failed to
resolve extrajudicial killings, tortured civilians, and abridged freedom of
expression. The number of villagers forcibly evacuated from their homes
since the conflict began is credibly estimated to be approximately 560,000.
The State Minister for Human Rights, who also is the coordinator for the
High Council for Human Rights, led the Government's effort to implement
legislative and administrative reforms. The Government introduced draft
legislation that would ease some restrictions on freedom of expression and
facilitate the prosecution of civil servants, but Parliament took no action
on the legislation by yearâs end. The Government further refined its human
rights training for the police and military. The military continued to
emphasize human rights training for its officers and noncommissioned
officers, which human rights groups reported led to a reduction in human
rights violations. Human rights education in primary schools is mandatory;
it is an elective in high schools.
The PKK committed widespread abuses as part of its terrorism against the
Government and civilians, mostly Kurds. PKK terrorists frequently killed
noncombatants, targeting village officials, village guards, teachers, and
other perceived representatives of the state. The PKK campaign of violence
effectively restricts the public's freedom to travel after dark in certain
regions. PKK terrorists also committed random killings, including in
tourist areas, in their effort to intimidate the populace. Late in the
year, after its leader Abdullah Ocalan was detained in Italy, the PKK
intensified its campaign of suicide bombings that caused several deaths and
many injuries. The PKK briefly declared and then suspended a cease-fire in
September, following the pattern of previous unilateral cease-fires, all of
which ended with renewed PKK violence.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom
From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
Credible reports of political and extrajudicial killings by government
authorities continued, although accurate figures were unavailable. The
Documentation Center of the Human Rights Foundation (HRF) reported a number
of deaths of detainees under suspicious circumstances, some as an apparent
result of torture. Human rights monitors also credibly reported that
government forces used excessive force, sometimes resulting in deaths,
during some raids on alleged terrorist and militant safe houses.
Human rights monitors remain greatly concerned about the 1996 Provincial
Authority Law, which authorizes security forces to shoot to kill when
challenging a suspect and grants provincial governors the power to declare
a "state of emergency" and to call in security forces. In January the
Constitutional Court ruled that authorities may not fire at suspected
terrorists without providing appropriate warning and ordered the Government
to revise the law. In January journalists Mehmet Topaloglu, Selahatin
Akinci, and Bulent Dil were killed in a police raid on an alleged
militantsâ house in Adana. According to the HRF, the evidence and
witnesses did not support the police version of the events. An autopsy on
Topaloglu found 11 bullets and a broken shoulder. Cigarette burns, drill
marks, multiple fractures, and traces of strangulation were noted on Dil's
body. Human Rights Watch (HRW) noted that 10 persons were killed during
house raids in Adana and Istanbul. Witnesses and human rights monitors did
not support the police version of the events. In March an 18-year-old
theft suspect died in police custody in Adana. In November 18-year-old
Hamit Cakir, arrested in a police sweep against HADEP, died in police
custody in Diyarbakir, allegedly from beatings during interrogation. A
criminal suspect also died in November in detention in Gaziantep. The
Government undertook serious investigations of most alleged extrajudicial
killings.
The HRA and other human rights groups recorded several mystery killings in
which the assailant's identity was unknown. Most of the reports pertain to
the southeast, where security force complicity is widely alleged, and some
of the victims were leaders or prominent members of the Kurdish community,
local politicians, journalists, or members of HADEP.
A Government report that came to light in January and a 1997 parliamentary
report revealed ties between the authorities and illegal gangs--
ultranationalists and members of organized crime--in the wake of the 1996
Susurluk incident, a car accident that provided evidence of such
associations. These links raised serious concerns about corruption and the
abuse of power in the security forces. The Government publicly committed
to investigate corruption but was criticized for its slow progress. In
April trials began of former Interior Minister Mehmet Agar, who was linked
to the Susurluk victims, and Member of Parliament (M.P.) Sedat Bucak.
Separately, in September State Minister Eyup Asik resigned amidst
allegations of links to organized crime leader Alaattin Cakici, who was
apprehended abroad with a diplomatic passport. These same allegations of
corruption led to a November vote of no-confidence in Parliament for the
Government of Prime Minister Yilmaz.
Although arrests of police and other law enforcement personnel increased in
cases of extrajudicial killings, the number of arrests and prosecutions
remained low, and punishment for those persons convicted remained
insufficient. In November a police supervisor in Adana's antitheft unit,
Murat Guldas, was released for time served after being convicted in the
March death of 18-year-old Mehmet Yavuz, who was killed by blows to the
abdomen while in police custody; 10 other police officers were acquitted in
the case. Yavuz's spouse and mother also claimed that the police beat
them.
Six Aydin police officers were convicted of involuntary manslaughter and
sentenced in April to 5¸ yearsâ imprisonment for the killing of student
Baki Erdogan, who was beaten to death while in police custody in 1993; the
police officers appealed the verdict. According to HRW, the defendants and
approximately 60 plainclothes police officers brutally beat Erdogan's
sister and lawyer in the courtroom after the sentencing. The Mersin Penal
Court in May sentenced police officer Suat Tunc to 2 years for the 1996
killing of 14-year-old Cetin Karakoyun, who died in police custody, but the
sentence was converted to a small fine. In June the Istanbul Penal Court
sentenced police officer Nurettin Ozturk to 6 years and 8 monthsâ
imprisonment for involuntary manslaughter in the 1993 death in detention of
Vakkas Dost. The 1997 acquittal of 11 police officers in the 1992 killing
of Remzi Basalak while in detention in Adana was upheld by the Court of
Appeals.
Little progress occurred in the trial of 48 police officers, including 3
senior officers and a deputy commissioner, for the 1996 killing of Metin
Goktepe, a correspondent for Evrensel newspaper who died from wounds
inflicted while in detention in Istanbul. Police initially denied that he
was detained, then later said that he died from a fall. Following large
public demonstrations and parliamentary criticism over the circumstances of
his death, an investigation led to the arrest of the officers. In 1997 the
courts decided to try separately 11 of the police officers for premeditated
murder. In March five were convicted of manslaughter, while the remaining
six were acquitted. However, the Court of Appeals in August overturned
both the convictions and the acquittals. In December the Afyon Penal Court
released the five officers pending the outcome of a new trial. The other
officers had returned to duty pending the outcome of the trial. One
officer, Murat Polat, who was the subject of an outstanding arrest warrant,
reportedly turned himself in to the Bitlis public prosecutor and remains
under arrest. No progress was made in the trial of the other 37, who were
charged with excessive use of force in controlling the demonstration.
The trial continued of 29 Jandarma soldiers and 36 antiterror police
officers charged with manslaughter in the 1996 beating deaths of 10
prisoners while quelling a prison disturbance in Diyarbakir (see Section
l.c.).
Investigation continues in the case of the death in custody in December
1997 of university student Burhanett Akdogu in Ankara. There were no
developments in the case of eight police officers charged in the 1995 death
of Sinan Demirtas, who died while in police custody, or in the case of
police officer Abdullah Bozkurt, charged with the 1994 killing of Vedat Han
Gulsenoglu. Bozkurt was reassigned back to Istanbul. The following cases
also remain unresolved: the 1994 killing of HEP party official Faik
Candan; the 1993 killing of journalist Ugur Mumcu; and the 1992 case of
Yucel Ozen.
The PKK continued to commit politically motivated extrajudicial killings,
primarily in rural southeast Anatolia. Victims included state officials
(Jandarma, local mayors, imams, and schoolteachers), state-paid
paramilitary village guards and their family members, young villagers who
refused to be recruited, and PKK guerrillas-turned-informants. According
to a press report in Yeni Yuzyil, the police reported that in 1998
approximately 243 soldiers and Jandarma, 10 police officers, 114 village
guards, and 132 civilians died in terrorist incidents. In June suspected
PKK terrorists stopped a minibus near Tunceli. Nine passengers were
murdered, and two were wounded. Turkish Hizbullah, an Islamist Turkish
terrorist group (not related to Lebanese Hizbullah), continued to target
civilians in the southeast. Trials continued in the cases of 89 Hizbullah
members charged with a total of 113 murders. While some human rights
monitors in the southeast believe that Turkish Hizbullah was founded by the
Government in the 1980's to target the PKK and its sympathizers, there are
more recent indications that Hizbullah operates alone.
Far-left armed groups, such as Revolutionary Left (Dev Sol/DHKP-C) and the
Turkish Workersâ and Peasants' Liberation Army (TIKKO), continued to commit
abusive, violent acts. According to press reports, the Islamic Great
Eastern Raiders' Front was suspected in a June bomb attack in Istanbul that
injured 12 people, and TIKKO members disguised in Turkish military uniforms
in June attacked a village near Tasova and assassinated a local official
who had assisted antiterror operations in the area. According to the HRF
and Amnesty International (AI), in May Tacettin Asci, treasurer of the
HRAâs Bursa Branch Association, and Ahmet Aydin were abducted and killed,
apparently by the Marxist-Leninist Communist Party, MLKP.
b. Disappearance
Accurate statistics on disappearances of those previously under detention
are hard to confirm; nonetheless, HRA figures indicate that such
disappearances continued to decline, from 66 disappearances in 1997 to 29
in 1998. Some persons disappeared after witnesses reported that security
forces or law enforcement officials took them into custody. Sometime after
March 31 Neslihan Uslu, Hasan Aydogan, Metin Andac, and Mehmet Mandal
disappeared from Izmir, according to AI. Uslu, editor of the journal
Devrimci Genclik, was detained frequently and threatened by police.
Aydogan was wanted for assisting the DHKP/C, and Andac previously had been
convicted of providing assistance to the same organization. The case was
reported to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary
Disappearance.
There was no resolution of the 1997 disappearances of Ilyas Eren, Burhan
Aktas, and 73-year-old Fikri Ozgen, all of whom were believed to be taken
into custody by plainclothes police, nor in the 1996 case in which at least
five bodies were found near Baharli.
For more than 3 years the "Saturday Mothers," a group primarily of women,
has gathered weekly on a major Istanbul street to protest the disappearance
of their relatives (see Section 2.b.). Beginning in May, the police often
broke up the meetings, sometimes beating and detaining participants, among
whom police said were members of other groups.
The Government made an effort to investigate and explain some reported
cases of disappearance. The Ministry of Interior operates a Missing
Persons Bureau, which is open 24 hours a day. Most families of persons who
disappeared hold the Government and security forces responsible and
consequently avoided contact with the government office. AI criticizes the
Bureau's findings for falling short of the thorough and impartial
investigations called for by the United Nations Declaration on the
Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. The Ankara police
operate a telephone number through which the public can obtain information
about detainees, gun registration, and other police-related matters. A
delegation from the U.N. Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary
Disappearances visited Turkey in September.
The Government, human rights organizations, and the media report that the
PKK routinely kidnaps young men or threatens their families as part of its
recruiting effort. PKK terrorists continued their abductions of local
villagers, teachers, journalists, and officials in the southeast.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
Despite the Constitutionâs ban on torture, the Governmentâs cooperation
with unscheduled foreign inspection teams, and public pledges by successive
governments to end the practice, torture continued to be widespread. The
HRF's torture rehabilitation centers in Ankara, Izmir, Istanbul, and Adana
had not completed compiling statistics on the number of credible
applications for treatment during the year, but the HRF estimated the
number to be over 600. Human rights attorneys and physicians who treat
victims of torture state that most persons detained for or suspected of
political crimes usually suffer some torture during periods of
incommunicado detention in police and Jandarma stations before they are
brought before a court. Ordinary criminal suspects also report torture and
mistreatment by police, according to HRW and the Lawyers Committee for
Human Rights.
Government officials admit that torture occurs. Although they deny that
torture is systematic, they explain its occurrence by stating that it is
closely tied to the fight against terrorism. However, many cases of
torture occur in western Turkey, outside the zone of conflict. Complaints
of torture or mistreatment in eight cases were filed with the Parliamentary
Human Rights Commission during the year.
In April the Istanbul Chamber of Doctors certified that 2¸-year-old Azat
Tokmak showed physical and psychological signs of torture after detention
at an Istanbul branch of the antiterror police. Azat's mother Fatma Tokmak
was detained in December 1996 on suspicion of PKK membership. The child
was burned with cigarettes and kicked in an effort to make the mother
confess. The child is living with other family members while his mother
remains incarcerated. In Diyarbakir local police beat Sadik Kelekcier and
his 11-year-old grandson when they raided their house seeking to locate the
boy's father. The grandfather reportedly was beaten again while in police
custody for a 3-day period. The grandson was not detained.
According to the HRF, in March 23-year-old Cihan Altinbas was detained
along with 13 other persons during an Istanbul demonstration. They were
subjected to beatings, including on the soles of the feet, forced prolonged
standing, loud music, threats, and insults. In May a group of 20
individuals, including women, was detained at the Diyarbakir security
directorate in connection with Newroz Kurdish New Year celebrations.
Witnesses reported that they were stripped, beaten, and subjected to
electric shock and a high-pressure cold water spray. In January university
student Ahmet Birge Uzuner received a medical certificate from the Forensic
Medical Institute that confirmed that he showed physical signs consistent
with being beaten. Uzuner claimed that he was beaten by four Izmir
antiterror police and forced to inform. In April Ali Kartal, who is deaf
and mute, was accused by Izmir police of aiding the PKK, subjected to
electric shock, and beaten, apparently because he could not respond to his
interrogators. In late November, leaders of the pro-Kurdish party HADEP
said that many of their party members were beaten and tortured during the
Government's crackdown on HADEP, which was precipitated by expressions for
support for PKK leader Ocalan after his arrest in Italy. On several
occasions police beat women (including elderly women) who held vigils on
behalf of relatives who disappeared (see Section 2.b.). Police also
violently broke up demonstrations and beat persons (see Sections 2.b., 4, 5,
and 6.a.)
Human rights observers report that because the arresting officer is also
responsible for interrogating the suspect, some officers may resort to
torture to obtain a confession that would justify the arrest. Many
detainees state that prosecutors ignore their claims of abuse during
interrogation. Commonly employed methods of torture alleged by the HRF's
treatment centers include: High-pressure cold water hoses; electric
shocks; systematic beatings, including on the soles of the feet and
genitalia; blindfolding; hanging by the arms; sleep deprivation; vaginal
and anal rape with truncheons and, in some instances, gun barrels; and
other forms of sexual abuse. Other forms of torture were submersion of
detainees in cold water, hanging sandbags on their necks, making them stand
on one foot, releasing drops of water on their heads, sitting on their laps,
riding on their shoulders, depriving them of oxygen, and withholding food.
The Government maintains that medical examinations occur once during
detention and a second time before either arraignment or release. However,
former detainees assert that some medical examinations take place too long
after the event to reveal any definitive findings of torture. Members of
security and police forces often stay in the examination room when
physicians are examining detainees, resulting in the intimidation of both
the detainee and the physician. Some physicians responded to the coercion
by refraining from examining detainees, performing cursory examinations and
not reporting findings, or reporting physical findings but not drawing
reasonable medical inferences that torture occurred. In March an Aydin
court acquitted a local physician who was charged with misuse of her office
when she reported several instances of torture by local Jandarma personnel.
The physician refused to be intimated by the Jandarma, ordered them out of
the examination room, and found that four of the six robbery suspects under
detention showed signs of mistreatment. In September four of the Jandarma
officers were charged with attempting to manipulate the results of a
medical examination and later convicted and given a small fine.
Credible sources in the human rights and legal communities estimate that
judicial authorities investigate very few of the formal complaints
involving torture and prosecute only a fraction of those investigated.
Security personnel accused of violating human rights are held to a
different standard than other citizens. The Anti-Terror Law provides that
officials accused of torture or other mistreatment may continue to work
while under investigation. Under the administrative adjudication law, an
administrative investigation into an alleged torture case is conducted to
determine if there is enough evidence to bring a law enforcement officer to
trial. Special provincial administrative boards rather than regular courts
decide whether to prosecute such cases. Suspects' legal fees are paid by
their employing agencies. Under the state of emergency, any lawsuit
directed at government authorities must be approved by the state of
emergency governor. Approval is rare. These constraints contribute to the
low number of convictions for torture.
In February the Government issued a circular and regulations designed to
prevent human rights violations. The measures provided for regular,
uninterrupted inspections of police stations by public prosecutors, gave
inspectors the authority to implement corrective measures, and provided for
the monitoring of police and Jandarma radio frequencies and interrogations
by public prosecutors. However, these measures were superceded by October
regulations on apprehension, policy custody, and interrogation. The
October measures include strict and detailed regulations on detention and
arrest procedures and proper interrogation techniques, including training,
for all law enforcement personnel. However, they do not provide for
monitoring and allow inspections by public prosecutors only during the
investigation process. Legal and human rights experts maintain that
torture usually occurs before the period when public prosecutors are able
to open an investigation.
Under the Criminal Procedures Law (CMUK), prosecutors are empowered to
initiate investigations of police or Jandarma officers suspected of
torturing or mistreating suspects. In cases where township security
directors or Jandarma commanders are accused of torture, the prosecutor
must obtain permission to initiate an investigation from the Ministry of
Justice, because these officials are deemed to have a status equal to that
of judges.
The 1997 CMUK reforms granted immediate access by attorneys to those
arrested for common crimes and after 4 days of detention for those persons
detained under the Anti-Terror Law. Private attorneys and human rights
monitors continued to report uneven implementation of the reforms.
In October the Court of Appeals overturned the March acquittal of 10 police
officers, including 2 superintendents, accused of torturing 16 teenagers
from Manisa (western Turkey) and sent the case back for retrial. The
Appeals Court ruled that the students had exhibited evidence of physical
and psychological torture while under detention. The 10 officers,
including 2 superintendents, remained free pending their new trial. The
students' case also was being retried, in Izmir State Security Court. The
Court of Appeals also overturned the January 1997 convictions of 10 of the
students on charges of belonging to an illegal leftist organization; 4
other students were acquitted originally.
The following torture cases remain unresolved. Two police officers were
appealing their 1-year suspended sentences for torturing Songul Yildiz,
whom they had questioned on suspicion of PKK membership after a March 1997
demonstration; the two men were allowed to remain on the police force.
Five Istanbul antiterror police were indicted in 1997 on charges of
torturing Gulderen Baran and four other detainees in 1995 during an
interrogation about their alleged membership in a terrorist organization.
Baran is appealing her 1997 conviction. The 1997 case of journalist Hatun
Temizalp remains unresolved. According to human rights monitors, Temizalp
was subjected to torture and abuse at the Istanbul antiterror police
headquarters and also was denied access to a lawyer. In a State Security
Court she complained of torture, despite police attempts to dissuade her
through intimidation.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture visited Turkey, at the
invitation of the Government, during November.
Prison conditions remain poor. Juveniles and adults are incarcerated
together and most prisons lack adequate medical care for routine treatment
or even medical emergencies. Families often must supplement the poor
quality food. Prisons are run on the ward system. Prisoners, often those
of the same ideological bent, are incarcerated together and indoctrinate
and punish their own. Government efforts to reform prisons by adopting a
cell system were criticized by prisoners, attorneys, and human rights
groups alike, who view the ward system as a more humane form of
incarceration. Prisons are plagued by overcrowding, underfunding, and very
poor administration.
The Parliament's Human Rights Committee investigated conditions in a
variety of prisons and confirmed the use of torture.
Small-scale hunger strikes occurred to protest prison conditions, the
proposed transfer to a cell system, and poor treatment by guards at many
institutions. Late in the year, to protest the arrest of PKK leader Ocalan,
several prisoners convicted of offenses related to the PKK went on
temporary hunger strikes and endured severe self-inflicted injuries,
including self-immolation.
Several monitoring groups, both domestic and international, carried out
prison visits. The Government was in regular dialog with the Council of
Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) and accepted
unannounced visits by the CPT.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
Arbitrary arrest and detention remained problems. To take a person into
custody, a prosecutor must issue a detention order, except in limited
circumstances such as when someone is caught committing a crime. The
maximum detention period for those charged with individual common crimes is
24 hours. A judge may extend the detention period for a maximum of 7 days.
Under the CMUK, those detained for individual common crimes are entitled to
immediate access to an attorney and may meet and confer with an attorney at
any time. However, private attorneys and human rights monitors report that
the authorities do not always respect these provisions.
No immediate access to an attorney is provided under the law for persons
whose cases fall under the jurisdiction of the State Security Courts:
these cases include persons charged with smuggling and with crimes under
the Anti-Terror Law. The lack of early access to an attorney is a major
factor in the use of torture by police and security forces. The decision
concerning early access to counsel in such cases is left to the public
prosecutor, who often denies access on the grounds that it would prejudice
an ongoing investigation. Although the Constitution specifies the right of
detainees to request speedy arraignment and trial, judges have ordered that
a significant number of suspects be detained indefinitely, sometimes for
years. Many cases involve persons accused of violent crimes, but it is not
uncommon for those accused of nonviolent political crimes to be kept in
custody until the conclusion of their trials.
Under a 1997 law that reduced detentions, persons detained for individual
crimes that fall under the Anti-Terror Law must be brought before a judge
within 48 hours, while those charged with crimes of a collective, political,
or conspiratorial nature may be detained for an initial period of 48 hours,
extended for up to 4 days at a prosecutor's discretion and, with a judge's
permission, for up to 7 days in most of the country and up to 10 days in
the southeastern provinces under the state of emergency. Attorneys are
allowed access only after the first 4 days. Private attorneys and human
rights monitors reported uneven implementation of these reforms. By law a
detainee's next of kin must be notified "in the shortest time" after arrest,
a requirement observed in practice in criminal and civil cases. Once
formally charged by the prosecutor, a detainee is arraigned by a judge and
allowed to retain a lawyer. After arraignment the judge may release the
accused upon receipt of an appropriate assurance, such as bail, or order
him detained if the court determines that he is likely to flee the
jurisdiction or destroy evidence. On several occasions police officers
beat and detained women (including elderly women) who held vigils for
relatives who had disappeared. Police also beat and detained demonstrators
(see Sections 1.c., 2.b., 4, 5, and 6.a.)).
The Government does not use forced external exile, but the Government
retains the authority to authorize internal exile (see Section
2.d.).
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary, and in practice the
courts generally act independently of the executive and legislative
branches. The Constitution stipulates that judges be independent of the
executive in the discharge of their duties and provides for security of
tenure. The High Council of Judges and Prosecutors, which is appointed by
the President and includes the Minister of Justice, selects judges and
prosecutors for the higher courts and is responsible for oversight of those
in the lower courts. The Constitution also prohibits state authorities
from issuing orders or recommendations concerning the exercise of judicial
power.
The judicial system is composed of general law courts, State Security
Courts, and military courts. There is also a Constitutional Court, the
nation's highest court. Most cases are prosecuted in the general law
courts, which include the civil, administrative, and criminal courts.
Either the High Court of Appeals or the Council of State hears appeals.
Provincial administrative boards established under the Anti-Terror Law
decide whether cases in which government officials are accused of
misconduct should be heard in criminal court. Military courts, with their
own appeals system, hear cases involving military law and members of the
armed forces and cases in which civilians are alleged to have impugned the
honor of the armed forces or undermined compliance with the draft. In July
a military court convicted Yasar Kaplan and Murat Balibey, journalist and
editor in chief, respectively, of the radical Islamist newspaper Akit, to
14 monthsâ imprisonment for an article they published reportedly "insulting
the military."
The Constitutional Court examines the constitutionality of laws, decrees,
and parliamentary procedural rules. However, it may not consider "decrees
with the force of law" issued under a state of emergency, martial law, or
in time of war.
State Security Courts (SSCâs) sit in eight cities. They are composed of
panels of five members--two civilian judges, one military judge, and two
prosecutors--and try defendants accused of crimes such as terrorism, drug
smuggling, membership in illegal organizations, and espousing or
disseminating ideas prohibited by law such as "damaging the indivisible
unity of the state." SSC verdicts may be appealed only to a specialized
department of the High Court of Appeals dealing with crimes against state
security. Senior civil servants and parliamentarians are routinely
provided public housing. According to a human rights monitor, housing
prosecutors and judges responsible for SSC cases in military barracks in
the southeast subjects them to significant pressure in reviewing cases.
The law gives prosecutors far-reaching authority to supervise the police
during an investigation. However, according to HRW, prosecutors make
little use of this power, especially in cases of security detainees.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled in October that the presence of a
military justice on the SSCâs was inconsistent with relevant European
conventions. While the Government continues to comply with the Court's
decisions, including payment of all fines and penalties, some attorneys
working on human rights issues announced that they would boycott SSC
trials. In September a senior Ministry of Justice official also voiced
concern about the presence of military justices on the SSC's and
recommended that Turkey review the composition of the SSC's.
During the year, the SSC's predominantly handled cases under the Anti-
Terror Law and Section 312 of the Criminal Code. The Government claims
that these courts were established to try efficiently those suspected of
certain crimes. These courts may hold closed hearings and may admit
testimony obtained during police interrogation in the absence of counsel.
The trial of 25 Diyarbakir lawyers charged in 1993 and 1994 for aiding and
abetting the PKK, and in a few cases, with membership in a terrorist
organization, continues at the Diyarbakir SSC. The defendants, 16 of whom
complained of torture and mistreatment while held in incommunicado
detention after their arrests, are free pending trial. Human rights
monitors believe that their prosecution is intended to punish them for
representing clients unpopular with the Government and for calling
attention to human rights violations in the southeast.
Under the Constitution, defendants have the right to a public trial in a
court of law. By law, the Bar Association must provide free counsel to
indigents who make a request to the court, except for crimes falling under
the scope of the SSCâs. Bar Associations in large cities, such as Istanbul,
have attorneys on call 24 hours a day. Costs are borne by the Association.
There is no jury system; all cases are decided by a judge or a panel of
judges. Trials may last for months or years, with one or two hearings
scheduled each month.
Defense lawyers generally have access to the public prosecutor's files
after arraignment and prior to trial (a period of several weeks). In cases
involving violations of the Anti-Terror Law and a few others, such as
insulting the president or "defaming Turkish citizenship," defense
attorneys may be denied access to files that the state asserts deal with
national intelligence or security matters. Attorneys defending
controversial cases occasionally face legal harassment. The case continues
of Hasan Dogan, a respected Malatya attorney who frequently defends
suspects in SSC cases. He was charged in 1997 for membership in an illegal
organization on the basis of testimony from a convicted prisoner who hoped
to receive favorable treatment. Dogan is free pending trial. Many lawyers
who practice before the SSC's contend that cases in which testimony
provided by informers is used are difficult to challenge.
In law and in practice, the legal system does not discriminate against
minorities. However, since legal proceedings are conducted solely in
Turkish, and the quality of interpreters varies, some defendant whose
native language is not Turkish may be disadvantaged seriously. In June the
Constitutional Court annulled Article 440 of the Penal Code, which allowed
for the punishment of women found guilty of infidelity. Men did not face
such restrictions.
Turkey recognizes the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights
and the European Commission of Human Rights. In September the Court found
that Turkish authorities had not conducted an effective investigation into
the 1993 attack on Esref Yasa and the murder of his uncle Hasim Yasa, who
ran a newspaper kiosk in Diyarbakir but also ruled that it had not been
established that security forces carried out the attacks, as alleged. In a
separate judgment in September, the Court ruled that Turkey had violated
its obligation under European conventions to bring detainees promptly
before a judge in 1993 when it held Huseyin Demir and Sukru Susin in
incommunicado detention for at least 23 days and Faik Kaplan for at least
16 days.
There is no reliable estimate of the number of political prisoners. The
Government claims that most alleged political prisoners are in fact
security detainees, convicted of being members of, or assisting, the PKK or
other terrorist organizations.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution provides for the inviolability of a person's domicile and
the privacy of correspondence and communication. With some exceptions,
government officials may enter a private residence or intercept or monitor
private correspondence only after issuance of a judicial warrant. These
provisions generally are respected in practice outside the state of
emergency region. A judge must issue a search warrant for a residence. If
delay may cause harm to the case, prosecutors may authorize a search.
Searches of private premises may not be carried out at night, unless the
delay would be damaging to the case or the search is expected to result in
the capture of a prisoner at large. Other exceptions include persons under
special observation by the Security Directorate General, places anyone can
enter at night, places where criminals gather, places where materials
obtained through the commission of crimes are kept, gambling establishments,
and brothels.
In the six provinces under emergency rule, the regional state of emergency
governor empowers security authorities to search without a warrant
residences or the premises of political parties, businesses, associations,
or other organizations. The Bar Association asserts that it is not
constitutional for security authorities in these provinces to search, hold,
or seize without warrant persons or documents. A total of six provinces
remain under "adjacent province" status, which authorizes the Jandarma to
retain security responsibility for municipalities as well as rural areas
and grants the provincial governor several extraordinary powers. Due to an
improved security situation, the use of roadblocks in the southeast
decreased; security officials still search vehicles and travelers
periodically.
Because so many villages already were evacuated, village evacuations by
security forces substantially decreased. In the past, there were thousands
of such evacuations in the southeast to prevent villagers from giving aid
and comfort to the PKK (see Section 1.g.).
Several human rights monitors complained that the Government interfered
with citizensâ choice of clothing and enforced a ban on the wearing of
religious head garments in government offices and other state-run
facilities (see Section 2.c.).
g. Use of Excessive Force and Violations of Humanitarian Law in Internal
Conflicts
Since 1984 the separatist PKK has waged a violent terrorist insurgency in
southeast Turkey, directed against both security forces and civilians,
mainly Kurds whom the PKK accuses of cooperating with the state. The TNP,
the Jandarma, village guards, and the armed forces, in turn, have waged an
intense campaign to suppress PKK terrorism, targeting active PKK units as
well as persons they believe support or sympathize with the PKK. In the
process, both government forces and PKK terrorists committed human rights
abuses against each other and against noncombatants. According to a
December speech by President Demirel, since 1984, 23,638 PKK members, 5,555
security force members, and 5,302 civilians lost their lives in the
fighting.
In an effort to deny the PKK logistical support, the Government rationed
food and other essentials in the provinces of Tunceli and parts of
Diyarbakir and Bingol provinces, causing severe shortages and hardship
among the population. Other than in Tunceli where the rationing has been
ongoing for some time, implementation of food rationing elsewhere is
sporadic or localized. Government security forces have returned to
evacuated villages and burned homes, to deny them to the PKK.
Because so many villages already have been evacuated and because the
fighting has now moved to mountains, government security forces evacuated
and destroyed fewer villages than in previous years. The Government's
stated purposes for the evacuations were to protect civilians or prevent
PKK guerrillas from obtaining logistical support from the inhabitants.
Some villagers alleged that the security forces evacuated them for refusing
to participate in the paramilitary village guard system.
The exact number of persons forcibly displaced from villages in the
southeast since 1984 is unknown. Most estimates agree that 2,600 to 3,000
villages and hamlets have been depopulated. A few nongovernmental
organizations (NGOâs) put the number of persons forcibly displaced as high
as 2 million. On the low end, the Government reported that through l997
the total number of evacuees was 336,717. A figure given by a former M.P.
from the region--560,000--appears to be the most credible estimate of those
forcibly evacuated. A parliamentary committee investigated the situation
in the southeast and concluded in June that, among other things, the State
was partly responsible for the displacements and that it had failed to
adequately compensate villagers who had lost their homes and lands in the
region. The European Court of Human Rights often ruled in favor of
villagers who sued over forcible evacuations, and the Government continued
to pay assessed damages.
Government programs to deal with and compensate the forcibly evacuated
villagers remain inadequate, as is assistance to those who have resettled
in urban areas. Many migrants continue to live in overcrowded, unhealthful
conditions with little opportunity for employment. Local and provincial
officials made some efforts to address the basic needs of migrants. In
several provinces, officials provided looms for use by unemployed women.
The rugs produced were then purchased by the Government for resale on the
open market. The governors of Siirt and Sirnak provinces initiated similar
assistance and training programs for women. One such program is a highly
successful program called "Multipurpose Community Center," or "Catom," with
branches in over 10 cities in the southeast. Using revenues from the
Southeast Anatolian Project (a multibillion dollar economic development
program focusing on a series of hydroelectric power and agricultural
irrigation projects), the Centers provided literacy, child care, basic
family health care, and vocational training classes for women. Officials
overseeing some of these programs acknowledge that funding is inadequate
and that much more needs to be done.
The Government noted that some displaced persons chose to resettle in urban
areas and are receiving assistance there. The Government initiated in 1996
an "emergency support program" to expedite resettlement in the southeast.
The funds are used for rebuilding houses and roads, as well as for animal
husbandry and beekeeping programs. Human rights monitors criticize
government efforts as inadequate in relation to the number of forcibly
displaced persons.
There were credible allegations that serious abuses by security forces
during the course of operations against the PKK continued. The Government
organizes, arms, and pays a civil defense force in the region known as the
village guards. Local villagers' participation in this paramilitary
militia is theoretically voluntary, but they are sometimes caught between
the two sides. If the villagers agree to serve, the PKK may target them
and their villages. If the villagers refuse to participate, government
security forces may retaliate against them and forcibly evacuate their
villages, or not allow them to return to their villages after evacuations.
The village guards have a reputation for being the least trained and
disciplined of the Government's security forces and have been accused
repeatedly of corruption, common crimes, and human rights abuses. Several
village guards stood trial during the year for crime such as the execution
of civilians and rape, according to HRW. In addition to the village guards,
the Jandarma and police "special teams" are viewed as those most
responsible for abuses.
The Government's state of emergency, renewed for 4 months in November,
imposes stringent security measures in six provinces in the southeast. The
regional governor for the state of emergency may censor news, ban strikes
or lockouts, and impose internal exile. The decree also provides for
doubling the sentences of those convicted of cooperating with separatists.
Informants and convicted persons who cooperate with the state are eligible
for rewards and reduced sentences. Only limited judicial review of the
state of emergency governor's administrative decisions is permitted.
Although schools have remained open in most urban centers in the southeast,
rapid migration has led to severe overcrowding of city schools and chronic
teacher shortages. The PKK policy of murdering teachers exacerbated the
situation (see Section 1.a.). Government officials claim that a
significant effort is being made both to reopen schools and to build new
schools in regions faced with acute overcrowding. According to government
figures, 1,726 primary and secondary schools and 2 high schools remain
closed in 11 provinces in the east and southeast for security reasons or
because of a teacher shortage. Although the Government continues to build
boarding schools in the region's larger towns, these new schools have
failed to fill the gap. A total of 88 boarding schools were completed as
of 1997 with a capacity of 49,614 students; 38 additional boarding schools
are under construction. Some ethnic Kurdish leaders expressed concern that
the Government favored building boarding schools, rather than rebuilding
local schools, as a way to accelerate the process of Kurdish
assimilation.
Turkish ground forces with air support conducted several operations during
the year in northern Iraq against the PKK. The Turkish Government
maintained that it targeted only the PKK in northern Iraq, not any other
groups or civilians. The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) cooperated
with the Turkish Government in shutting down PKK facilities in northern
Iraq.
The PKK suffered severe setbacks during the year, especially following the
March arrest of its second-in-command Semden Sakik, and the November
detention of its leader Abdullah Ocalan in Italy. PKK attacks against
civilians, military, and law enforcement personnel in the southeast
continued. In June suspected PKK terrorists stopped a minibus near
Tunceli. Nine passengers were murdered, and two were wounded. Reportedly
seven of the nine killed were village guards. In July a bomb at the spice
bazaar in Istanbul, a well-known tourist area, killed at least six persons
and injured over 65 others; the bomb was reportedly planted by the PKK.
Also in July, the PKK stopped 40 vehicles in Hakkari and kidnaped 5
persons. In August the police thwarted a PKK suicide bomb attack with the
arrest of a female would-be bomber in Adana. In November and December,
three young women in separate incidents carried out suicide bomb attacks in
public areas. The PKK is believed to be responsible for these attacks,
which led to several deaths and many injuries.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech and of the press; however,
the Government continued to limit these freedoms. The Criminal Code
provides penalties for those who "insult the President, the Parliament, and
the army." Numerous other provisions in various laws restrict freedom of
expression to one degree or another; those most frequently employed include
Article 8 of the Anti-Terror Law and Article 312 of the Criminal Code.
Judges in general examine evidence rigorously and dismiss many charges
brought under these laws.
Domestic and foreign periodicals that provide a broad spectrum of views and
opinions are widely available. Government censorship of foreign
periodicals is very rare. While overall readership of the local press is
not large for a country of 62 million inhabitants, the newspaper business
is intensely competitive.
Electronic media reach nearly every adult, and their influence is
correspondingly great. Radio and television experienced explosive growth
in the 7 years since privately owned broadcasting was allowed. In a
December speech President Demirel said that 230 local, 15 regional, and 16
national television stations--the majority private--were registered, along
with 1,055 local, 108 regional, and 36 national radio stations. Other
television and radio stations broadcast without an official license. In
1994 Parliament passed regulatory legislation making it illegal for
broadcasters to threaten the country's unity or national security and
limiting the private broadcast of television programs in languages other
than Turkish. The increasing availability of satellite dishes and cable
television allows access to foreign broadcasts, including several Turkish-
language private channels. Internet use is growing and faces no government
restrictions.
Despite the Government's restrictions, the media criticize government
leaders and policies daily. Media coverage of the situation in the
southeast tended to be unreliable, underreporting it in some instances and
sensationalizing it in others. Government Decree 430 gives the Interior
Ministry upon the request of the regional governor the authority to ban
distribution of any news viewed as misrepresenting events in the region,
which led to self-censorship of news reporting across the country. In the
event that a government warning is not obeyed, the decree provides for a 10-
day suspension of operations for a first offense and 30 days for subsequent
offenses.
SSC prosecutors ordered the confiscation of numerous issues of leftist,
Kurdish nationalist, and pro-PKK periodicals. According to HRW, numerous
journals were closed down during the year, and the Ulkede Gundem newspaper
was fined approximately $12,000 (TL 40 billion) and closed by court order
for 312 days. The police frequently raid offices of small leftist
publications.
Other restrictions on freedom of expression continued to be problems:
Journalists, cultural figures, and politicians were harassed and prosecuted
for expressing their ideas. Individuals and publications sympathetic to
Kurdish, Islamist, and leftist viewpoints were particularly hard hit, as
the Government continued its crackdown against fundamentalism and suspected
PKK members and sympathizers. In February the Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ) unsuccessfully appealed for the release of 12 imprisoned
journalists. Ismail Besikci has been in prison since 1993 on a variety of
new charges based upon his ongoing articles on Kurdish issues.
In January an Istanbul SSC sentenced journalist Haluk Gerger to 20 months
in prison for an article he wrote on the southeast. The Court of Appeals
upheld the verdict in May. In March poet Can Yucel was sentenced to 1 year
and 2 monthsâ imprisonment for insulting the President. In July editorial
cartoonist Dogan Guzel was sentenced to 3 years in prison--later reduced to
16 months--"for insulting the state and armed forces" for four cartoons
critical of the state.
In January the Constitutional Court closed the Islamist Refah Party and
banned six Refah leaders, including former Prime Minister Erbakan, from
political activity for 5 years (see Section 3). The Court found the Party
guilty of attempting to undermine the secular nature of the state based in
part on public statements made by Refah leaders. Party members joined a
new Islamist party named the Virtue Party (Fazilet). According to HRW, in
February 128 members of the Aczmendi sect were sentenced to 24 months to 6
years in prison for "insulting Ataturk and disobeying security
forces."
In February Sanar Yurdatapan, a well-known musician and spokesman for
freedom of expression, and two other members of a "Peace Working Group"
were each sentenced to 10 months in prison for insulting the Turkish
General Staff (TGS), under Article 159 of the Penal Code. The group
alleged that the military was responsible for a January 1996 attack on a
minibus in Guclukonak (southeast) in which 11 people were killed.
Authorities blamed the PKK for the attack, as several of the victims were
village guards. Yurdatapan's separate trial for harboring two reported PKK
members and possession of false passports continues.
In March the deputy chief of staff of the armed forces banned mainstream
columnists Mehmet Ali Birand and Yalcin Dogan and reporter Muharrem
Sarikaya from entering military sites, interviewing military personnel, and
reporting any news about the military. The ban was lifted 3 days later.
In April a Diyarbakir SSC convicted Istanbul Mayor Recep Tayyip Erdogan for
a speech that he made in 1997 that was deemed to have "incited ethnic,
racial, religious enmity," based on Article 312 of the Penal Code. He was
sentenced to 10 months in prison, but remained free pending the outcome of
his appeal. In September the Supreme Court of Appeals upheld Erdoganâs
conviction, which he is appealing. The sentence also carries a lifetime
ban from politics, including expulsion from the Virtue Party, of which
Erdogan was a prominent member. Three other Islamist mayors from the
Virtue Party also were removed from office by court action. They were from
Kayseri, Agri, and the Ankara district of Sincan.
In May following unsubstantiated allegations by a captured PKK leader,
allegedly leaked by the military, that two prominent journalists, Mehmet
Ali Birand and Cengiz Candar, collaborated with the PKK, their publishers
imposed sanctions on them.
In June Esber Yagmurdereli, a blind human rights activist and respected
lawyer, was rearrested for failing to obtain a medical certificate
detailing his poor health, a condition of his conditional release in
November 1997. Yagmurdereli was convicted in May 1997 of promoting Kurdish
separatism on the basis of public assertions that the ethnic Kurdish
minority is oppressed. In October 1997, he was remanded into custody to
begin serving a 22-year sentence. Also in June, journalist Ragip Duran
surrendered to authorities in Istanbul to begin serving a 10-month sentence
for an article that he wrote in the defunct newspaper Ozgur Gundem in 1994,
in conjunction with an interview that he had conducted earlier with PKK
leader Abudllah Ocalan. He is expected to serve a total of 7¸ months in
prison. However, in an unrelated case journalist Namik Durukan, a Milliyet
reporter accused of pro-PKK activities by a captured PKK terrorist, was
acquitted by a Diyarbakir SSC in June.
In June the Court of Appeals overturned a guilty verdict by an Ankara SSC
against members of the pro-Kurdish HADEP, including party chairman Murat
Bozlak. The case centered on an incident at the party's 1996 convention in
Ankara, during which the Turkish flag was torn down and replaced by a PKK
banner. In 1997 an SSC sentenced Faysal Akcan, who reportedly took down
the flag, to 22¸ years in prison; Bozlak and party convention chairman
Hikmet Fidan each were sentenced to 6 years' imprisonment, while 29 other
officials and party members received 6¸-month sentences. The SSC also
found evidence linking HADEP to the PKK.
In September 17 persons, mostly HADEP members, were sentenced to prison
terms ranging from 1 to 2 years and fined various amounts for writing
articles in a 1997 edition of the HADEP Bulletin that supposedly incited
"racial, ethnic and religious enmity." Prominent among those on trial were
imprisoned former DEP M.P. Leyla Zana and HADEP Chairman Murat Bozlak.
Zana, who already is serving a 15-year term in an unrelated case, was
sentenced an additional 2 years; she planned to appeal. Bozlak was
acquitted. In a separate case in September an Istanbul SSC sentenced
former DEP Chairman Hatip Dicle (a fellow prisoner with Leyla Zana), to 35
additional months in prison and a fine for an article he wrote in a pro-
Kurdish daily newspaper. However, the Court suspended the prison sentence.
His attorney planned to appeal the case.
In August playwright Mehmet Vahi Yazar was sentenced to 24 years in prison
plus a fine "for insulting the military" based on Article 312 of the Penal
Code for a play portraying the state as opposed to religion. The four
actors who performed in the play were sentenced to 16 yearsâ imprisonment
plus fines. They remain incarcerated pending the outcome of their own
trial.
In October former political science professor Yalcin Kucuk was arrested at
the Edirne border after returning from self-imposed exile in France
following convictions for writing a pro-Kurdish article and conducting
interviews with PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan. Kucuk faces 2 yearsâ
imprisonment.
An Ankara SSC in May charged Erol Yarar, chairman of the Association of
Independent Industrialists and Businessmen (MUSIAD), an Islamist
businessmen's association, with promoting racial, ethnic, and religious
enmity (Article 312 of the Penal Code) for a speech he made in October
1997.
HRA Chairman Akin Birdal and several colleagues were involved in a number
of high-profile court cases involving freedom of speech issues in 1997 and
1998 (see Section 4).
In May the European Court of Human Rights ruled against Turkey for
dissolving the Socialist Party on the basis of statements that its leader
Dogu Perincek made during the 1991 general election campaign. In July the
Turkish Court of Appeals upheld Perincek's 1996 conviction for acting
"against the principle of national unity and territorial integrity of the
state" for 1991 televised campaign statements in which he reportedly
accused the state of terrorism. The Court ordered that he be stricken from
the membership of the small Workers' Party (IP), which he heads (see
Section 3.). He also faces charges of illegal possession of classified
state documents, assisting a terrorist organization (the PKK), and
possession of unlicensed firearms.
Kurdish-language cassettes and publications on Kurdish subjects continued
to be available, although periodic suppression of the media continued. The
Kurdish-language weekly, Azadiya Welate, and some 10 other publications
were available only on an infrequent basis. Potential customers are afraid
to purchase Kurdish-language materials because the possession of such items
may be interpreted as evidence of PKK sympathies. Kurdish-language
broadcasts are not allowed.
The High Council for Radio and Televison (RTUK) penalized a number of
private radio and television stations for alleged violations of broadcast
regulations, including use of offensive language, libel, obscenity,
instigating separatist propaganda, or airing programs in Kurdish. Several
local broadcasting channels were ordered off the air for temporary periods.
According to HRW, many RTUK decision were enforced even when courts
overturned the decisions. Pro-PKK Med-TV, based in Belgium and the United
Kingdom, broadcasts via satellite dish and can be received in the
southeast.
No new developments occurred in the case of a publisher and translator for
Pencere Publishing, who were appealing a suspended sentence and fine for
publishing a Turkish translation of a German book, and in the suspended
case of 1,080 writers who supported novelist Yasar Kemal, who also was
appealing a case.
A group of Turkish and Kurdish academics, politicians, and intellectuals
continued to hold a series of nationwide panel discussions on the situation
of the Kurds and possible solutions to their problems. Despite minor
police attention, the group explored explicitly nonviolent solutions within
a democratic context, especially in the largely Kurdish southeast.
Academics continued to publish articles and papers on the Kurdish issue
without government interference. The Mesopotamian Cultural Center, a
corporation established to promote Kurdish language and culture, continued
to operate despite a lack of official permission and despite official
belief that the organization is linked to the PKK. However, for this
reason their centers in Istanbul and the southeast periodically were
harassed and shut down.
In May an Istanbul court acquitted Yilmaz Camlibel, president of the
Kurdish Culture and Research Foundation (Kurt-Kav), and one of his
assistants on charges of illegally promoting the Kurdish language. Despite
the presidentâs acquittal, Kurt-Kav was not allowed to resume Kurdish
language classes. Academic freedom is otherwise respected.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly, but authorities may deny
permission if they believe that a gathering is likely to disrupt public
order. Prior notification of gatherings is required, and the authorities
may restrict meetings to designated sites.
Starting in May police increasingly and forcibly broke up gatherings of the
"Saturday Mothers," a group primarily of women who gathered every Saturday
for more than 3 years on a major Istanbul street to hold a vigil for
relatives who inexplicably disappeared. Each time they meet, the Saturday
Mothers read a press announcement detailing the case of someone who has
disappeared. The reading of a press release in a public place does not
require authorization under the law, although demonstrations require
permits. The police response to the vigil increased over the weeks, with a
number of women and their supporters being detained. On multiple occasions
police wielded truncheons and beat detainees, including elderly women. In
September the police beat approximately 30 detainees inside a police bus
and sprayed pepper gas into the bus before closing its doors. The
Government alleges that the crackdown occurred in response to the
infiltration of the Saturday Mothers by members of illegal organizations
who voiced political slogans that could incite hatred.
In March police used force (water cannons and tear gas) to break up a
demonstration organized by women's groups in honor of International Women's
Day, but which had turned violent because of outside provocation. In a
separate event in March police used water cannons, tear gas, and truncheons
to break up violently a demonstration of the public employees'
confederation, KESK (see Section 6.a.); approximately 30 workers were
hospitalized. On the following day, police arrested many members of the
BTS transport union. In September Istanbul police forcibly dispersed
participants in "World Peace Day" events and prevented them from boarding
buses bound for Diyarbakir. More than 100 persons were beaten or detained
briefly in Istanbul, while others were detained in Diyarbakir and Mardin
(see Section 4).
In February HRF President Yavuz Onen, HRA President Akin Birdal, Ufuk Uras
of the left-of-center Freedom and Democracy Party, and Ahmet Turk from
HADEP were acquitted on charges of holding an unauthorized demonstration.
They were protesting the Susurluk incident, which revealed links between
state officials and underworld criminal figures (see Section
1.a.).
The Constitution provides for freedom of association, but associations and
foundations must submit their charters for government approval, a lengthy
and cumbersome process.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution establishes Turkey as a secular state and provides for
freedom of belief, freedom of worship, and private dissemination of
religious ideas, and the Government generally observed these provisions in
practice. However, it imposed some restrictions on religious minorities.
About 99 percent of the population is Muslim. Under the law, religious
services may take place only in designated places of worship. Although
Turkey is a secular state, religious instruction in state schools is
compulsory for Muslims. Upon written verification of their non-Muslim
background, minorities considered by the Government to be covered by the
Lausanne Treaty (Greek, Armenian, and Jewish) are exempted by law from
Muslim religious instruction, although students who wish to attend may do
so with parental consent. Syriac Christians are not exempt because the
Government does not consider them to be an official Lausanne Treaty
minority.
Tarikats and other mystical Sunni Islamic orders were banned in the 1920âs
but largely were tolerated until recently. However, in 1997 the National
Security Council , a half-military, half-civilian body entrusted in part
with responsibility "for protecting the state against any foreign or
domestic threat to its interests," called for strict enforcement of the ban
against Tarikats as part of its campaign against Islamic fundamentalism.
Some Tarikats, like members of the Aczimendi Brotherhood, faced legal
action in previous years for their vocal public demonstrations.
In accordance with a 1997 law, which made 8 years of secular education
compulsory, new enrollments in the first 8 years of the Islamic imam-Hatip
schools (in existence since 1950) were stopped, although children already
in those classes were allowed to finish their grades. The imam-Hatip
schools were very popular among conservative and Islamist Turks as an
alternative to secular public education. Under the law, students may
pursue study at the imam-Hatip schools upon completion of 8 years in the
secular public schools. Students who complete 5 years of primary school
may enroll in Koran classes on weekends and summer vacations.
Turkey's Alawi Muslim minority (an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam) is estimated
to number at least 12 million persons. However, there are no government-
salaried Alawi religious leaders, in contrast to Sunni religious leaders.
Nonetheless, in December 1997 the Government allocated $15 million (TL 3
trillion) to the Alawi community. Some Alawis allege discrimination in the
form of failure to include any Alawi doctrines or beliefs in religious
instruction classes. Alawis charge a Sunni bias in the Religious Affairs
Directorate, and claim that the Directorate tends to view the Alawis as a
cultural rather than a religious group. However, Sunni Islamic political
activists charge that the secularist state favors, and is under the
influence of, the Alawis.
Many prosecutors regard proselytizing and religious activism on the part of
either Islamists or evangelical Christians with suspicion, especially when
they deem such activities to have political overtones. There is no law
that explicitly prohibits proselytizing, but police sometimes arrest
proselytizers for disturbing the peace. Courts usually dismiss such
charges. If the proselytizers are foreigners, they may be deported, but
generally they are able to reenter the country easily.
Several human rights monitors complained that the Government increasingly
enforced a 50-year-old ban on the wearing of religious head garments in
government offices and other state-run facilities. According to these
groups, some women who wear head coverings have lost their jobs in the
public sector as nurses and teachers. Others were not allowed to register
for fall semester classes at universities, and some professors and
university administrators were dismissed for wearing or supporting the
wearing of head garments. The Turkish military dismissed from the service
individuals whose official files reflect participation in Islamist
fundamentalist activities.
Most religious minorities are concentrated in Istanbul. The number of
Christians in the southeast has been declining as the younger Syriac
generation leaves for Europe and North America. Minority religions not
recognized under the Lausanne Treaty may not acquire additional property
for churches. The Roman Catholic Church in Ankara, for example, is
confined to diplomatic property. The Office of Foundations (Vakiflar Genel
Mudurlugu) must approve the operation of churches, monasteries, synagogues,
schools, and charitable religious foundations, such as hospitals and
orphanages. Restoration or construction also may be carried out in
buildings and monuments considered to be "ancient" with authorization by
the Regional Board on the Protection of Cultural and National Wealth. In
October 1997 the Armenian Orthodox Church was granted permission to restore
properties and open a new church in the Diyarbakir region. However the
Syriac Church was ordered to halt restoration efforts to its monasteries in
the southeast in September 1997 and to terminate its Aramaic language
classes in October 1997 on the grounds that it lacked proper authorization
from the Regional Board, the Education Ministry, and the Office of
Foundations. The Church and government authorities are working to resolve
these issues.
The authorities monitor the activities of Eastern Orthodox Churches and
their affiliated operations. The Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul
consistently has expressed interest in reopening the seminary on the Island
of Halki in the Sea of Marmara. The seminary has been closed since 1971
when the State nationalized most private institutions of higher learning.
Under current restrictions, including a citizenship requirement, religious
communities remain unable to train new clergy for eventual leadership.
Following the death of the Armenian Patriarch, Karekin II, in March,
regional authorities and Istanbul police officials responsible for
"minorities" delayed and unsuccessfully sought to influence the outcome of
the elections for a new Patriarch. The Armenian community elected a new
Patriarch in November.
Bureaucratic procedures relating to historic preservation impede repairs to
some religious facilities. Under the law, religious buildings that become
"extinct" (because of prolonged absence of clergy or lay persons to staff
local religious councils or for lack of adherents) revert to government
possession. Some non-Muslim minorities, particularly the Greek Orthodox
community and, to a lesser extent, the Jewish community, the Armenian
Orthodox community, and the shrinking Syriac Christian community have lost
houses of worship and other facilities.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
Citizens generally enjoy freedom of movement domestically and the freedom
to travel abroad. The Constitution provides that a citizen's freedom to
leave may be restricted only in the case of a national emergency, civic
obligations (military service, for example), or criminal investigation or
prosecution.
Due to an improved security situation, the use of roadblocks in the
southeast decreased; security officials still search vehicles and travelers
periodically.
The internal exile law was repealed in l987, but in 1990 the government
granted the southeast regional governor the authority to "remove from the
region," for a period not to exceed the duration of the state of emergency
(now in its 13th year), citizens under his administration whose activities
"give an impression that they are prone to disturb general security and
public order." There were no known instances of the use of this broad
authority during the year.
Turkey hosts an estimated 300 Europeans who are given residence permits on
grounds of temporary asylum, principally from Greece, Bulgaria, and the
former Yugoslavia, while an estimated 2,000 persons from Bosnia are granted
a special temporary "guest" status. When Turkey ratified the 1951 United
Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, it exercised the
option of accepting the Convention's obligations only with respect to
refugees from Europe. It has not subsequently lifted the geographic
limitation of its treaty obligation. As a result, the Government does not
recognize non-European asylum seekers as refugees and requires that they
register with the authorities within 5 days of entering the country. The
Government screens these applicants, determines those that it considers
bona fide, and then refers them to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR). If the UNHCR believes that a non-European asylum-seeker meets
refugee criteria the case is submitted to third countries for resettlement.
The UNHCR intervenes with government officials if it disagrees with their
negative decisions about individual asylum claims. An appeal may be lodged
within 15 days of a negative decision by the authorities. After the appeal
procedure, rejected applicants are issued with a deportation order which
may be implemented after 15 days of its notification. In 1998 some 3,000
persons had their asylum applications rejected.
According to the UNHCR, implementation of asylum regulations improved
considerably during the year. Police officials took a more relaxed and
tolerant attitude toward asylum seekers who complied with the provisions of
the asylum regulations. The number of refugees refouled (turned back)
decreased from 76 in 1995, to 20 in 1997, and to 15 in 1998. The
refoulement of asylum seekers decreased from 61 persons in 1997 to 49 in
1998.
Nonetheless, the 5-day limit for registration in the governmentâs asylum
program is implemented strictly and remains an obstacle to full access of
asylum seekers to refugee status determination. However, the
administrative court ruled that the submission of an asylum claim within a
fixed time limit is not a condition for being an asylum seeker and that
being outside this limit cannot be a reason for the authorities not to
assess an asylum application or grant asylum. The obstacles inherent in
the Government's asylum procedures lead to many refugees being considered
as "illegals." These individuals, recognized as mandate refugees by the
UNHCR, are not allowed to depart for resettlement. In 1997 the Government
declined numerous offers from the UNHCR to assist in establishing reception
centers for such undocumented asylum seekers in border areas. However, the
UNHCR and government authorities continue to work to resolve this problem
and to find ways to allow such cases to qualify for the Government's asylum
program. According to the UNHCR, approximately 70 refugees were so
affected during the year.
In July the Government agreed to a UNHCR proposal for a comprehensive
program to support government training of officials who deal with asylum
and refugee issues, funded by foreign donors. The first two phases of the
training started in September and included police officers from 20
provinces. The Government also agreed to training sessions with judiciary
officials.
Turkey continues to be a major transit and departure point for illegal
migrants and asylum seekers of various nationalities en route to Europe.
While many traveled in small groups utilizing land routes across the
Turkish-Greek border, increasing numbers departed via boat and ship.
Arrivals from Turkey by ship peaked in early spring but diminished after
authorities took action against alien smugglers in Turkish ports.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
Their Government
The Constitution provides citizens with the right to change their
government peacefully, and citizens exercise this right in practice.
Turkey has a multiparty parliamentary system, in which national elections
are held at least every 5 years on the basis of mandatory universal
suffrage for all citizens 18 years of age and over. As of September, more
than 32 political parties were active (most of them minuscule), 9 of which
were represented in Parliament. The Grand National Assembly (Parliament)
elects the President as head of state every 7 years or when the incumbent
becomes incapacitated or dies.
The armed forces, with significant support from several segments of civil
society including some political parties, the media, the judiciary, labor
unions, and NGO's, continued their public campaign against fundamentalism.
In accordance with the National Security Council's 1997 18-point program
against fundamentalism, in June and July Parliament passed 3 pieces of
legislation, viewed by some as restrictive of Islamist political
activities: an amendment to the law governing the Religious Affairs Office
(Diyanet), which makes it responsible for the administration of all
mosques; an amendment to the Law on Zoning Regulations, under which the
Office must authorize construction of new mosques; and, an amendment to the
Law on Assembly and Public Gatherings, which forbids the wearing of
uniforms and masks by demonstrators.
In April some 20 businessmen, primarily members of MUSIAD, briefly were
detained as part of a government investigation into the funding of
fundamentalist activities. An Ankara SSC filed charges in May against
MUSIAD chairman Erol Yarar for a 1997 speech he made that was deemed to
have violated Article 312 ("incited racial and religious enmity") of the
Penal Code.
The Government neither coerces nor forbids membership in any political
organization, although the Constitutional Court may close down political
parties for unconstitutional activities. In January it banned the Islamist
Refah party for violation of the secular nature of the Republic (Articles
68 and 69 of the Constitution and the Political Parties Law). In May the
European Court of Human Rights found that Turkey had violated the freedom
of association article of the European Convention on Human Rights by
dissolving the Socialist Party on the basis of statements that its leader
Dogu Perincek made during the 1991 general election campaign. In July the
Turkish Court of Appeals upheld Perincek's 1996 conviction for violating
the Political Parties Law by acting "against the principle of national
unity and territorial integrity of the state" and ordered that he be
stricken from the membership of the small Workers' Party (IP), which he
headed (see Section 2.a.). There were no developments in the case of the
Democratic Mass Party (DKP), which was charged in June 1997 with violating
provisions of the Constitution and the Political Party Law because its
platform defends Kurdish rights. The case was pending a ruling by the
Constitutional Court at yearâs end.
There are no legal restrictions on women or minorities voting or
participating in politics. The Constitution calls for equal political
rights for men and women. However, women are seriously underrepresented in
government and politics: there were 13 women in the 550-seat Parliament
and 2 female ministers in the 39-member Cabinet in the Yilmaz Government.
Women's committees are active in political party organizations.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
The nongovernmental Human Rights Association has branches in 41 cities and
claims a membership of about 19,000 persons. In 1990 the HRA established
the Human Rights Foundation, which operates torture rehabilitation centers
in Ankara, Izmir, Istanbul, and Adana, and serves as a clearinghouse for
human rights information. Other domestic NGO's include the Istanbul-based
Helsinki Citizens Assembly, the Ankara-based Turkish Democracy Foundation,
human rights centers at a number of universities, and the pro-Islamic
Mazlum-Der, the Organization of Human Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed
Peoples.
In April the Government closed the Mersin Migrants' Association (Goc-Der),
an organization founded by ethnic Kurds to assist displaced Kurdish
migrants. The closure notice cited the discovery of unauthorized
publications and activities inconsistent with the association's charter.
Prior to its closure, the Association--the first NGO of its kind in the
southeast--assisted thousands of Kurdish migrants who fled villages in
southeast Turkey to the southern port city of Mersin. It provided medical
and legal services to migrant families, negotiated wage contracts for
migrant laborers, and served as an ombudsman for Kurdish migrants with the
Government.
In November Amnesty International and the Istanbul Bar Association
sponsored in Istanbul an international conference on human rights in Turkey,
in which State Minister for Human Rights Hikmet Sami Turk participated.
Amnesty International's foreign expert on Turkey, who had been banned from
the country, was allowed in to attend the conference. However, some local
NGO's active in human rights complained that they were excluded, despite
requests to participate.
Despite the Government's outreach to the NGO community, local-level
government agents, some as senior as provincial governors, harassed human
rights monitors as well as lawyers and doctors involved in documenting
human rights violations. HRA branches were particularly hard hit. The HRA
branch in Diyarbakir, closed for an indefinite period by court order in May
1997 for activities that allegedly threatened the integrity of the state,
remained closed at yearâs end. Human rights monitors believe that the
Diyarbakir branch was targeted in part for its work in preparing several
cases for consideration by the European Commission of Human Rights. In
February the HRA branch in Mardin, also shut down in 1997, was allowed to
reopen but was closed again for 3 months in late December. The Kirsehir
HRA office was closed in June for 3 months but reopened. The Adana HRA
office was ordered closed for 15 days in October for the alleged possession
of an illegal publication, but it also reopened. The Sanliurfa HRA office,
which was closed in May 1997 along with the Diyarbakir branch, reopened in
December. According to the HRA, all of these closures were for alleged
violation of the Associations Law.
In August HRA Chairman Akin Birdal and two other human rights monitors, who
were found guilty in 1997 of inciting ethnic hatred based on a speech
Birdal gave during World Peace Day in 1996, were acquitted on appeal. HRA
board members, including Birdal and 10 others, were acquitted in Ankara in
February on charges of disseminating separatist propaganda and inciting
racist and ethnic enmity for comments and speeches they made condemning
human rights violations during events organized by the HRA in 1996 to
commemorate Human Rights Week. In October the Ankara Penal Court acquitted
Birdal on charges that he had "insulted the military." However, in a
separate case in October the Court of Appeals affirmed Birdal's conviction
on charges of inciting hatred and enmity for a 1996 public statement that
the Kurdish problem was a problem for all Turks, not just the Kurdish
population, and that the continued existence of torture and extrajudicial
killings was attributable to the lack of a resolution of the Kurdish
problem. Birdal remains free pending an appeal of this latest
verdict.
In May Birdal was shot and severely wounded in his offices. Eleven people
are on trial for the shooting. Some of the assailants have admitted to
being part of a group accused of having links to the government and
underworld figures.
On June 13, the HRF opened a new office in Diyarbakir (in the southeast);
however, 4 days later officials from the local Office of Foundations shut
the office on the grounds that the HRF had not obtained all necessary
permits. The HRF was allowed to reopen the center in August. Other HRF
documentation or torture treatment centers are located in Izmir, Ankara,
Adana, and Istanbul.
An Appeals Court in Diyarbakir upheld the conviction of Dr. Seyfettin
Kizilkan, the former president of the southeast Chamber of Doctors and
director of Diyarbakir's largest state hospital. He remains free pending a
review of the case by the court of first instance. In 1996 Kizilkan was
convicted and sentenced to a 3-year, 9-month prison term after police
allegedly found bomb materials and PKK documents in his home. Dr. Kizilkan
and his associates maintain that the police planted the evidence.
The case against seven members of the Diyarbakir branch of the HRA accused
of aiding the PKK was suspended. All seven were required to surrender
their passports and were released provisionally. They face sentences
ranging from 12 to 22¸ years if they again are alleged to violate the law.
The trial, which began in 1995, focused mainly on the publication of the
booklet "Emergency Situation - 1992."
In September Istanbul police forcibly dispersed persons who tried to
participate in an HRA-organized World Peace Day event. Organizers sought
to lead a convoy of buses from Istanbul to the southeast to demonstrate for
peaceful resolution of the conflict in the region. Over 100 persons were
beaten or detained briefly (see Section 2.b.). Legal proceedings brought
against some of the organizers of the 1997 "Musa Anter Peace Train"
continued.
The State Minister for Human Rights, as chair of the High Council for Human
Rights, continued to investigate human rights abuses and to reach out to
NGO and community leaders. The Council, composed of representatives from
the Justice, Interior, Education, Health, and Foreign Affairs Ministries
(along with representatives of the security forces), met weekly to review
aspects of the human rights situation, to advise the Government on steps
for improvement, and to draft appropriate legislation. In order to broaden
its research and outreach efforts beyond Ankara, the High Council met in
several cities, including in the predominantly Kurdish southeast.
Since 1991 Parliament has convened a Human Rights Commission. The
Commission is authorized to oversee compliance with the human rights
provisions of domestic law and international agreements to which Turkey is
a signatory, investigate alleged abuses, and prepare reports. During the
year, the Commission visited prisons throughout the country and called
attention to unsatisfactory conditions, including the use of torture and
abuse.
Representatives of diplomatic missions who wish to monitor human rights are
free to speak with private citizens, groups, and government officials.
Security police often place such official visitors in the southeast under
visible surveillance in an effort to intimidate those they meet. Visiting
government officials and members of legislatures generally were able to
meet with human rights activists, including Leyla Zana and three other
imprisoned former DEP parliamentarians. However, Council of Europe
rapporteurs in September were prevented by Ankara Central Prison
authorities from holding a pre-arranged meeting with Zana and her
colleagues.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability,
Language, or Social Status
The Constitution proclaims Turkey to be a secular state, regards all
citizens as equal, and prohibits discrimination on ethnic, religious, or
racial grounds. Discrimination nevertheless remains a problem in several
areas. The Government officially recognizes only Eastern Orthodox,
Armenian Apostolic, and Jewish adherents as minorities covered under the
1923 Treaty of Lausanne.
A free and lively political debate took place during the year over the role
of state institutions, including the military, in safeguarding the proper
balance between the protection of secular democracy from religious
extremism and the protection of freedom of religion.
Women
Spousal abuse is serious and widespread. Parliament passed legislation in
January making spousal abuse illegal. Nevertheless, spousal abuse still is
considered an extremely private matter, involving societal notions of
family honor. Few women go to the police, who in any case are reluctant to
intervene in domestic disputes and frequently advise women to return to
their husbands. Turks of either sex may file civil or criminal charges but
rarely do so. Laws and ingrained societal notions make it difficult to
prosecute sexual assault or rape cases. Penalties may be reduced legally
if a woman was not a virgin prior to a rape or if a judge deems the woman
to have acted provocatively. "Honor murders"--the killing by immediate
family members of women who are suspected of being unchaste--continue in
rural areas or among recent immigrants to cities. The traditional practice
of "virginity testing" continues as well. In October the Government
introduced new regulation on police investigations that, among other things,
banned the practice of "virginity testing." In 1997 five residents of a
state foster home attempted suicide rather than undergo such testing.
According to the Family Research Institute in the Prime Minister's Office,
beating is one of the most frequent forms of violence against women in the
home. Data were not available for 1998, but in the past the Institute has
noted complaints of beatings, threats, economic pressure, and sexual
violence. In a survey of 12 provinces, physical abuse reportedly occurred
in roughly 30 percent of families. There are several shelters for battered
women, and at least two consultation centers--Istanbul's Purple Roof
Foundation and Ankara's Altindag center city shelter.
Some laws still discriminate against women. In June the Constitutional
Court annulled Article 440 of the Penal Code, which punished women, but not
men, for infidelity (see Section 1.e.). The Civil Code prohibits granting
gender-based privileges or rights but retains some discriminatory
provisions concerning marital rights and obligations. Because the husband
is the legal head of household, he is authorized to choose the domicile and
represents the conjugal unit. As parents, husband and wife exercise joint
child rearing rights, but when they disagree, the husband's view often
prevails. Women's groups have lobbied to change the provision that the
husband is the legal head of household. A single woman who gives birth to
a child out of wedlock is not considered automatically to be the legal
guardian of her child: a court decision may be required. Divorce law
requires that the divorcing spouses divide their property according to
property registered in each spouse's name. Because in most cases property
is registered in the husband's name, this provision can create difficulties
for women who wish to divorce. Under inheritance laws, a widow generally
receives one-fourth of the estate, her children the rest.
The literacy rate for women is 78 percent, compared with 91 percent for men,
according to government statistics. Particularly in urban areas, women
continue to improve their position, including in the professions, business,
and the civil service, although they continue to face discrimination to
varying degrees. Women constitute between 43 and 50 percent of the work
force. However, only 11,000 of 151,000 managerial employees are women.
Women generally receive equal pay for equal work in the professions,
business, and civil service jobs, although a large percentage of women
employed in agriculture and in the trade, restaurant, and hotel sectors
work as unpaid family help. Women may take the examination required to
become governors or subgovernors; several have been appointed subgovernors.
Independent women's groups and women's rights associations exist and
continue to increase in number. The concept of lobbying for women's rights,
including greater representation in Parliament, is still relatively new but
is gaining momentum. Women continue to be very active in ongoing debates
between secularists and Islamists, especially with respect to the right to
choose whether to wear religious head garments in public places, such as
government offices and universities.
Children
The Government is committed to furthering children's welfare and works to
expand opportunities in education and health, including a further reduction
in the infant mortality rate. The State Minister for Women's and Family
Issues oversees implementation of the Government's programs for children.
Government-provided education for children is mandatory. Since 1997
primary education is compulsory through age 14 or the eighth grade.
Traditional family values in rural areas place a greater emphasis on
advanced education for sons than for daughters. The new 8-year compulsory
education requirement is expected to allow more girls to continue their
education.
Although the law provides special safeguards for children in police custody,
police officers and prosecutors frequently circumvent or ignore these
provisions. The law stipulates that interrogations of minors should be
carried out by the state prosecutor or a designated assistant and that
minors must be provided with lawyers. However, according to AI, police and
prosecutors often deny minors access to lawyers and fail to inform parents.
Children and juveniles detained under the Anti-Terror Law also often are
held for up to 4 days in incommunicado detention.
Children have suffered greatly from the cycle of violence in the southeast.
The migration--forced or voluntary--of many families, terrorism against
teachers, and school closings in the southeast have uprooted children and
moved them to cities that are hard pressed to find the resources to extend
basic, mandatory services such as schooling. Many cities in the southeast
are operating schools on double shifts, with as many as 100 students per
classroom (see Section 1.g.). The Government built regional boarding
schools to help combat this problem, but these are insufficient. In
practice in rural Anatolia and the southeast, the literacy rate for girls
is very low, and many do not complete primary school. The literacy rate
for boys, most of whom complete primary school, is higher. Some continue
on to high school, for which they generally must travel or live away from
home.
Instances of child beating and abuse are more frequently reported than in
previous years, according to women's groups. The increase likely is
attributable to greater public awareness of the problem.
People with Disabilities
Legislation dealing with the disabled is piecemeal, and little legislation
exists regarding accessibility to buildings and public transportation.
Certain categories of employers are required to hire disabled persons as 2
percent of their employee pool, although there is no penalty for failure to
comply.
Religious Minorities
Jews and numerous Christian sects freely practice their religions and
report little discrimination in daily life. However, extremist groups
target minority communities from time to time. An arson attack occurred in
January on the Orthodox shrine, now a museum, at St. Therapon. The
custodian was killed and artifacts were stolen. Investigations into this
incident and the December 1997 bombing of the Orthodox Patriarchate in
Istanbul produced no arrests by yearâs end. Many religious minority
members, along with many in the secular political majority of Muslims, fear
the possibility of rising Islamic extremism and the involvement of even
moderate Islam in politics. Islamist journals frequently publish anti-
Semitic diatribes.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The Constitution does not recognize the Kurds as a national, racial, or
ethnic minority. There are no legal barriers to ethnic Kurds'
participation in political and economic affairs, but Kurds who publicly or
politically assert their Kurdish ethnic identity risk harassment or
prosecution. Many Members of Parliament and senior officials and
professionals are ethnic Kurds. Kurds who are long-term residents in
industrialized cities in western Turkey have been for the most part
assimilated into the political, economic, and social life of the nation,
and much intermarriage has occurred over many generations. Kurds who
currently are migrating westward (including those displaced by the conflict
in the southeast) bring with them their culture and village identity, but
often little education and few skills.
The 1991 repeal of the law prohibiting publications or communications in
Kurdish legalized private spoken and printed communications in Kurdish.
The use of minority languages, including Kurdish, in television and radio
broadcasts by political parties and in schools is restricted by a plethora
of laws and even articles of the Constitution; these restrictions are
invoked arbitrarily. Kurdish is widely spoken on the streets, especially
in the largely Kurdish southeast, and Kurdish music recordings reportedly
were widely available there. Soz-TV in Diyarbakir reportedly played some
Kurdish music as well. Materials dealing with Kurdish history, culture,
and ethnic identity continue to be subject to confiscation and prosecution
under the "indivisible unity of the state" provisions of the Anti-Terror
Law (see Section 2.a.).
A series of actions against predominantly Kurdish organizations in the
southeast has convinced many in the region that despite the Governmentâs
public commitment to improve its human rights record, the boundaries for
cultural and political expression are in fact shrinking. Some contend that
official harassment of Kurdish groups in the southeast increased.
In the wake of the November arrest in Italy of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan
and the protests in Turkey and elsewhere in his support, nationalist gangs
attacked and beat suspected Kurdish sympathizers. Security forces also
detained an estimated 1,500 to 3,000 members of HADEP, and party leaders
allege that many were tortured or beaten. In November an 18-year-old party
member died in police custody, allegedly from beatings during
interrogation.
The Mesopotamian Cultural Center (MKM), a corporation established to
promote Kurdish language and culture, has branches in Adana, Mersin,
Sanliurfa, and Diyarbakir in addition to cities in western Turkey. Police
pressure against MKM branches in Mersin and Adana is ongoing. The
Diyarbakir and Sanliurfa branches remained closed. Cultural and theater
performances are monitored and often interrupted by local officials. All
MKM branches report that they have been prevented from selling Kurdish-
language music cassettes and warned against organizing more cultural
events.
The Ministry of Education tightly controls the curriculum in schools
(except foreign-language schools not part of the Turkish system). Many
Greek-origin students report difficulty in continuing their education in
Turkey and go to Greece, often never to return.
The Romani population is extremely small, and there were no reported
incidents of public or government harassment directed against
them.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
Workers, except police and military personnel, have the right to associate
freely and form representative unions. This right encompasses civil
servants, including schoolteachers.
The Constitution stipulates that no one shall be compelled to become or
remain a member of, or withdraw from, a labor union. The law states that
unions and confederations may be founded without prior authorization based
on a petition to the governor of the province of the prospective union's
headquarters. Although unions are independent of the government and
political parties, they must obtain official permission to hold meetings or
rallies and must allow police to attend their conventions and record the
proceedings. The Constitution requires candidates for union office to have
worked 10 years in the industry represented by the union. The Supreme
Court banned the DISK-affiliated union in the leather sector, Deri-Is,
because of this article in the Constitution. The International Labor
Organization (ILO) Committee on Freedom of Association stated that this
provision is extremely prejudicial to the interests of the trade unions and
urged that it be repealed.
Just over 12 percent of the total civilian labor force (15 years old and
above) is unionized. There are three confederations of labor unions: the
Turkish Confederation of Workers Unions (Turk-Is); the Confederation of
Turkish Real Trade Unions (Hak-Is); and the Confederation of Progressive
Trade Unions (DISK). Unions and their officers have a statutory right to
express views on issues directly affecting members' economic and social
interests.
Prosecutors may ask labor courts to order a trade union or confederation to
suspend its activities or to go into liquidation for serious infractions,
based on alleged violation of specific legal norms. However, the
Government may not dissolve a union summarily.
The constitutional right to strike is restricted partially. For example,
workers engaged in the protection of life and property and those in the
mining and petroleum industries, sanitation services, national defense, and
education do not have the right to strike. The right to strike is
suspended for the first 10 years in the nine free trade zones.
Collective bargaining is required before a strike. The law specifies the
steps that a union must take before it may strike or before an employer may
engage in a lockout. Nonbinding mediation is the last of those steps. A
party that fails to comply with these steps forfeits its rights. The
employer may respond to a strike with a lockout but is prohibited from
hiring strikebreakers or using administrative personnel to perform jobs
normally done by strikers. Article 42 of Law 2822, governing collective
bargaining, strikes, and lockouts, prohibits the employer from terminating
workers who encourage or participate in a legal strike. Unions are
forbidden to engage in secondary (solidarity), political, or general
strikes, or in slowdowns. In sectors in which strikes are prohibited,
disputes are resolved through binding arbitration.
The Government has the statutory power under Law 2822 to suspend strikes
for 60 days for reasons of national security or public health and safety.
Unions may petition the Council of State to lift such a suspension. If
this appeal fails, and the parties and mediators still fail to resolve the
dispute, the strike is subject to compulsory arbitration at the end of the
60-day period. The ILOâs Committee of Experts and the Committee on the
Application of Standards regard the Government's application of Law 2822 as
too broad and called on the Government to limit recourse to compulsory
arbitration to essential services in the strict sense of the term. The
Government asserts that the law does not contradict the Committees'
principles.
During the first 6 months of 1998, there were 25 strikes involving 4,441
workers, which resulted in approximately 78,962 lost workdays. During the
same period there were no lockouts. No strikes or strike decisions were
suspended by the first, second, or third coalition governments since their
formation following the 1995 general elections.
Some labor union members faced government limits on freedom of speech and
assembly (see Sections 2.a. and 2.b.), while some civil service
organizations continued to demonstrate for the right to strike and for
higher salaries.
In February 20 public employees, including a member of the executive
committee of KESK and officials of the SES and Egitim-Sen unions in
Diyarbakir, Adiyaman, Siirt, and Agri were banished. In November 1997
authorities closed down SES and Egitim-Sen offices in Urfa. KESK officials
stated that the authorities were trying to prevent union activities in
these cities.
In March the public employees' confederation, KESK, organized a national
demonstration in Ankara to protest a draft bill on public employees' trade
unions that the Parliament was debating. The draft did not grant the
rights to bargain collectively and to strike and contained many
prohibitions and restrictions. The demonstration was broken up violently
by police, who also on the following day arrested many members of the BTS
transport union. The Government withdrew the bill from parliamentary
consideration.
There were no developments in two separate trials, begun in 1996, of Turk-
Is officials over 1995 demonstrations that Turk-Is held to protest the
deadlock in collective bargaining. In the first case, the public
prosecutor demanded prison terms for the Turk-Is officials of a minimum of
6 months. In the second case, the prosecutor's office accused Turk-Is
management of violating the Associations Law when it announced its support
for opposition parties before the 1995 general elections.
With government approval, unions may and do form or join confederations and
international labor bodies, as long as these organizations are not hostile
to Turkey or to freedom of religion or belief. The International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), of which Turk-Is had been an
affiliate for years, approved DISK as an affiliate in 1992; Hak-Is became a
member in 1997.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
All industrial workers have the right to organize and bargain collectively,
and most industrial and some public sector agricultural workers are
organized. The law requires that, in order to become a bargaining agent, a
union must represent not only 50 percent plus one of the employees at a
given work site, but also 10 percent of all the workers in that particular
industry. This 10 percent barrier has the effect of favoring established
unions, particularly those affiliated with Turk-Is, the confederation that
represents nearly 80 percent of organized labor.
The Ministry of Labor has reportedly manipulated membership figures to
prevent unions from acquiring bargaining rights or to remove such rights.
The ICFTU reports that, as a result of the law, workers in many sectors of
economic activity are not covered by a collective agreement.
The ILO called on Turkey to rescind this 10 percent rule. However, both
Turk-Is and the Turkish employers' organization favor retention of the
rule. In 1994 the Government informed the ILO Committee on the Application
of Standards that the Ministry of Labor and Social Security proposed to
remove the 10 percent numerical restriction and that it had communicated
its proposal to the social partners. The ILO took note of the Government's
statement that it continued to study removal of this requirement despite
objections from employer and worker organizations. The Government has
taken no further action.
The law on trade unions stipulates that an employer may not dismiss a labor
union representative without rightful cause. The union member may appeal
such a dismissal to the courts, and if the ruling is in the union member's
favor, the employer must reinstate him and pay all back benefits and
salary. These laws generally are applied in practice.
The ILO has urged the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure
workers effective protection against antiunion discrimination. Some
private sector employers continued to try to eliminate unions. The DISK
trade union confederation reports that between January 1996 and June 1998,
some 40,000 trade union members were fired. During the year union workers
at the glass bottle factory Sise Cam San A.S. were offered large sums of
money to leave the Birlesik Metal-Is union, 27 workers were dismissed at a
Siemens factory in Bursa in an effort to force them to leave the same union,
and more than 250 members of the Tekstil trade union were dismissed at the
Zumrut Orme factory in Cerkezkoy.
Union officials in Diyarbakir stated that it is impossible to enforce labor
rights in the southeast.
Public employees held largely peaceful protests in major cities during
March, June, and July to press their demands for higher wages. In late
July, the Government agreed to a 35 percent wage increase, effective August
8.
A law enacted in 1984 provides for the establishment of free trade zones,
which are intended to attract domestic and especially foreign investment
and to promote international trade. There are nine such zones operating in
Mersin, Antalya, the Aegean region, Trabzon, Istanbul (2), Eastern Anatolia,
Mardin, and Rize. Union organizing and collective bargaining are permitted
in the zones, but the right to strike is suspended for the first 10 years
of operation. In the meantime, labor disputes that cannot be settled by
the parties are subject to compulsory arbitration. Workers inside the
zones are paid in foreign exchange rather than Turkish currency, giving
them a hedge against inflation.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The Constitution and statutes prohibit compulsory labor, including that
performed by children. The laws are enforced.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The Constitution and labor laws forbid the employment of children younger
than age 15, with the exception that those 13 and 14 years of age may
engage in light, part-time work if enrolled in school or vocational
training. The Constitution also prohibits children from engaging in
physically demanding jobs such as underground mining and from working at
night. The Ministry of Labor effectively enforces these laws only in the
organized industrial sector.
In practice many children work because families need the supplementary
income. An informal system provides work for young boys at low wages, for
example, in auto repair shops. Girls rarely are seen working in public,
but many are kept out of school to work in handicrafts, especially in rural
areas. The bulk of child labor occurs in rural areas and often is
associated with traditional family economic activity, such as farming or
animal husbandry. It is common for entire families to work together to
bring in the harvest. The Government recognizes the serious problem of
child labor and works with the ILO to document its extent and to determine
solutions. With the passage in 1997 of the 8-year compulsory education
program (previously 5 years were compulsory), the Government expects the
number of child workers to be reduced significantly. Children enter school
at 6 or 7 years of age and are required to attend until age 13 or
14.
In April several NGO's greeted the 40-member "Global March Against Child
Labor" delegation at the Iranian border and escorted it through the country
to the border with Greece. The marchers spent several days in Istanbul and
Ankara, and major labor confederations and some NGO's held events and
conferences for the delegation. The march was viewed as an important step
in heightening awareness of the problem of international child
labor.
The Ministry of Labor, the Ankara municipality, the Turk-Is labor
confederation, and the Turkish Employers Association are among the
institutions participating in the ILO'S International Program on the
Elimination of Child Labor (IPEC), a project to solve the problems of
working children. The Ministry of Labor and the ILO jointly produced a
study showing that almost one-half (44 percent) of the children
working are below the age of 15, are paid less than the minimum wage, and
have no insurance. According to a 1996 study conducted by the Turk-Is
child workers bureau, for every 100 workers, 32 were between the ages of 6
and 19. Children employed at work sites and homes constitute 5 percent of
the total working population and were employed mostly in the metal, shoe,
woodworking, and agricultural sectors. The young workers employed on a
monthly or daily wage payment basis worked over 40 hours per week, and
those employed at home and not receiving a wage payment worked less than 40
hours per week. The study reported that 56 percent of these workers were
uninsured. It added that the total number of working young persons between
the ages of 12 and 19 was 3.5 million and that 45 percent of them were
under the age of 16.
According to the Ministry of Labor, there are approximately 60 trained
child labor inspectors, and more are expected to be trained. However,
according to Turk-Is, there are over 600,000 work sites and a mere 450
regular inspectors. No action took place on a labeling system that had
been proposed for 1998.
The Constitution prohibits compulsory labor, including that performed by
children, and the laws are enforced (see Section 6.c.).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The Labor Ministry is obliged legally to set minimum wages at least every 2
years through a minimum wage board, a tripartite government-industry-union
body. In recent years, it has done so annually. However, in 1998 there
were two adjustments: in January the nominal minimum wage was increased by
25 percent and increased again in August by 35 percent (compared with an
annual inflation rate of nearly 80 percent). The monthly gross minimum
wage rates, which became effective on August 8, were approximately $174 (TL
47.8 million) for workers older than age l6 and about $148 (TL 40.7
million) for workers under age 16.
It would be difficult for a single worker, and impossible for a family, to
live on the minimum wage without support from other sources. Most workers
earn considerably more. Workers covered by the labor law, who constitute
about one-third of the total labor force, also receive a hot meal or a
daily food allowance and other fringe benefits that, according to the
Turkish Employers' Association, make basic wages alone account for only
about 33 percent of total compensation.
The Labor law sets a 45-hour workweek, although most unions have bargained
for fewer hours. The law prescribes a weekly rest day and limits the
number of overtime hours to 3 a day for up to 90 days in a year. The Labor
Inspectorate of the Ministry of Labor effectively enforces wage and hour
provisions in the unionized industrial, service, and government sectors,
which cover about 12 percent of workers.
Occupational health and safety regulations are mandated by law, but the
Government has not carried out an effective inspection and enforcement
program. Law 1475 sets out procedures under which workers may remove
themselves from hazardous conditions without risking loss of employment.
The law also allows for the shutdown of an operation if a five-person
committee, which includes safety inspectors, employee, and employer
representatives, determines that the operation endangers workers' lives.
In practice financial constraints, limited safety awareness, carelessness,
and fatalistic attitudes result in scant attention to occupational safety
and health by workers and employers alike.
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