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Voice of America, 01-08-03Voice of America: Selected Articles Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The Voice of America <gopher://gopher.voa.gov>SLUG: 2-278959 Turkey / Prisons (L only) DATE: NOTE NUMBER:CONTENTS
[01] TURKEY / PRISONS (L ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)DATE=08/03/01TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-278959 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: A hunger strike by Turkish prisoners has claimed another victim. As Amberin Zaman reports from Ankara, the death toll in the eight-month protest over prison conditions in Turkey is now at 30. TEXT: The latest prisoner to die was 28-year-old Muharrem Horoz.
Horoz, a member of an outlawed left-wing group, was imprisoned for his
role in a 1999 bomb attack in the Central Anatolian province of
Cankiri in which three people were killed. A human rights group in the
area said Horoz died at a hospital (Izmit) in northwest Turkey after
continuing to refuse food.
Hundreds of mainly left-wing inmates and their sympathizers have been
fasting for months to protest conditions in Turkey's new
maximum-security prisons.
Prisoners say the new prisons -- made up of small cells that
accommodate no more than three people -- leave them isolated and
vulnerable to abuse by prison officials.
But government officials insist the new jails are necessary. They say
the old-style prisons, where inmates were held in large dormitory type
cells of up to 60 people, allowed militant groups to virtually dictate
what happened in the cells. Riots and hostage taking occurred
frequently in the larger wards. The officials say the larger cells
also served as indoctrination and recruiting centers for outlawed
militant groups.
Western rights groups accuse the Turkish government of failing to
allow inmates at the new prisons to freely take part in communal
activities. Prison officials say only inmates who can prove that they
have abandoned their radical views and are now loyal to the Turkish
government are permitted recreation time with fellow inmates. (Signed)
[02] TURKEY / KURDS (L ONLY) BY AMBERIN ZAMAN (ANKARA)DATE=08/03/01TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-278946 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: A new political party is being formed in Turkey, one that says it will be a strong advocate for Kurdish rights. Amberin Zaman went to a meeting of the party and filed this report from Ankara. TEXT: /// CLAPPING - FADE UNDER ////// FIRAT ACT 1 - IN TURKISH - FADE UNDER ////// OPT ////// FIRAT ACT 2 - IN TURKISH - FADE UNDER ///NEB/AZ/KL/JWH SLUG: 2-278945 Bosnia / War Crimes (L) DATE: NOTE NUMBER: [03] BOSNIA / WAR CRIMES (L ONLY) BY LAUREN COMITEAU (THE HAGUE)DATE=08/03/01TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT NUMBER=2-278945 CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Three former Muslim army officers indicted by the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal have been arrested in Bosnia and will be transferred to The Hague to answer charges of war crimes committed against Bosnian Croats in 1993 and 1994. Lauren Comiteau reports from The Hague. TEXT: The three army officers -- two generals and a colonel -- are the
highest-ranking Bosnian Muslims to be arrested so far. They are the
first Muslims charged with crimes against Croats committed during the
Muslim-Croat war in central Bosnia.
Prosecutors say most of the victims of the crimes were either
prisoners of war or civilians. Some were massacred following military
attacks, others were killed or beaten in detention centers, and some
were used as human shields.
The three army officers -- Generals Mehmed Alagic and Enver
Hadzihasanovic, and active-duty Brigadier Amir Kubura -- are charged
as commanders with war crimes and grave breaches of the 1948 Geneva
Conventions. Prosecutors say they believe most of the crimes were
actually carried out by foreign Muslim fighters who referred to
themselves as Mujahedin, or holy warriors.
The three officers are now in detention in Bosnia, but an official of
the Muslim-Croat federation said (Friday) the three will be extradited
to The Hague in the coming days.
General Hadzihasanovic, who retired last year, was chief of staff for
Bosnia's Muslim-dominated army. His Croatian counter-part, General
Tihomir Blaskic, has already been convicted and sentenced to 45 years
by the court for crimes committed during the same conflict. General
Hadzihasanovic has appeared in The Hague before to testify against him
and even against General Radislav Krstic, who was convicted of
genocide on Thursday.
Prosecutors say they've recently handed over other sealed indictments
to Sarajevo officials, but declined to give details about who they
are. (Signed)
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