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Rights Group Says Torture Still Problem In Turkey

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  • Rights Group Says Torture Still Problem In Turkey

    RIGHTS GROUP SAYS TORTURE STILL PROBLEM IN TURKEY
    By Selcuk Gokoluk

    Reuters, UK
    Feb 27 2007

    ANKARA, Feb 27 (Reuters) - European Union candidate Turkey still has
    a high number of cases of torture despite government pledges of zero
    tolerance, the country's biggest rights group said on Tuesday.

    In its 2006 report, Turkey's Human Rights Association (IHD) also said
    other human rights abuses were on the rise, citing extra judicial
    killings and deaths in detention.

    IHD data showed 708 cases of torture last year, down from 825 in 2005.

    "The fight against torture and the fall in the number of cases is not
    good enough ... Is it normal to have 708 torture cases in a country
    where torturers get zero tolerance?" Yusuf Alatas, head of the IHD,
    said at a news conference.

    The centre-right AK Party government, which began EU entry talks in
    2005, has vowed to show zero tolerance to torturers.

    The European Commission said in a progress report last year that
    allegations of torture and the impunity of its perpetrators were a
    cause for concern in Turkey.

    Extra-judicial killings and deaths in custody as a result of torture
    rose to 130 in 2006 from 89 the previous year, IHD said.

    Alatas attributed some of the rise in reported abuses to an upsurge
    in violence in Turkey's impoverished southeast, where Kurdish rebel
    guerrillas are battling Turkish security forces.

    Restrictions on freedom of expression are also increasing as security
    takes precedence amid a more nationalist climate in Turkey, he said.

    Turkey faces presidential and parliamentary elections this year.

    More than 1,000 people are on trial in Turkey for expressing their
    views and 108 people were given jail sentences in 2006, the IHD
    data showed.

    A number of writers, including Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk and slain
    Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink, were prosecuted in 2006 under
    Article 301 of the penal code, which makes it a crime to insult
    Turkish identity or state institutions.

    The EU has urged Turkey to scrap or amend the article.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said recently parliament would consider
    amending the article in the near future, though experts say the real
    problem is the conservative mentality of Turkish prosecutors and
    judges, imbued with a culture that gives priority to the state over
    individual rights.

    Alatas accused the police of using disproportionate force in
    demonstrations.

    "As a result of extreme use of force by the police, 12 people
    were killed last year... When a few university students meet for a
    protest, thousands of police gather. Students are being tried just
    for protesting about tuition fees," he said.

    Police were not immediately available for comment.
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