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ANKARA; AK Party Has Room To Improve In Human Rights Reform -- Repor

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  • ANKARA; AK Party Has Room To Improve In Human Rights Reform -- Repor

    AK PARTY HAS ROOM TO IMPROVE IN HUMAN RIGHTS REFORM -- REPORT
    AyÞe Karabat Ankara

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 16 2007

    The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has given a
    number of reassurances relating to the health, welfare and freedoms
    of its citizens during its time in power. However, although it has
    kept some of these promises, it has also fallen short of the mark in
    many instances.

    One of the promises of the AK Party government, as stated in its
    "emergency action plan," was that -- within one month -- "arrangements
    related to basic rights and freedoms will be speedily made within
    the framework of universally recognized standards and norms and the
    EU criteria." However one the obstacles to freedom of expression
    in Turkey, namely Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), was
    actually prepared by the AK Party government. This article makes
    insulting "Turkishness" a crime. Since this article became law,
    charges have been brought in more than 60 cases, some of which
    have been against high-profile figures, including Nobel Laureate
    Orhan Pamuk. Despite the fact that Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, in
    the wake of the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink --
    earlier prosecuted under Article 301 -- declared that "in its current
    form there are certain problems with Article 301. We see now that
    there are changes that must be made to this law" the article still
    remains intact.

    The AK Party government also promised that "all the amendments required
    to be made to judicial services and procedures for establishment of
    justice shall be realized quickly in a fast and timely manner." It
    said that this would be done within a period of one year. The
    government made some changes in the TCK and also to the Code of
    Criminal Procedures. These changes in the law honored most of the
    promises, but were not implemented; instead some steps back were
    taken. For example, without the permission of public prosecutors,
    the police will not be allowed to carry out searches or detentions.

    However this principle was criticized by some segments of society as
    a way of tying the hands of the police, so the government gave on
    its implementation. Some reforms were made in order to enforce the
    defense in the courts, such as cross examination, but these needed
    amendments to the structure of the courts that have not yet been made.

    Another promise in the emergency action plan was as follows: "Turkey
    will urgently be based on a state of law. To this end all kinds of
    legal arrangements will be made and related applications will be
    followed up very closely," but the government was not able to shed
    light on some controversial cases, such as Þemdinli.

    Two noncommissioned officers and a former member of the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) have been jailed for their role in the
    bombing of a bookshop in the eastern township of Þemdinli near Hakkari
    in 2005. For many the bombing confirmed suspicions that the military
    in Turkey sometimes acted outside the law. Local prosecutor Ferhat
    Sarýkaya -- who indicted some high-ranking army personnel, including
    the now Chief of General Staff Gen. Yaþar Buyukanýt, who called one of
    the soldiers concerned a "good boy" -- was later removed from office
    and barred from the legal profession. Buyukanýt called the Þemdinli
    affair a "legal disaster" that he said had involved an attempt to
    defame the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK). Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan, in a statement, termed the remarks by the top commander
    "proper" and "statesmanlike."

    The government also promised to increase transparency by holding
    regular meetings with other political parties, nongovernmental
    organizations and media organizations for information sharing and
    an exchange of opinions. Erdoðan once held a meeting with "Kurdish
    intellectuals," but did not take further steps in this regard.

    As far as the social policy goes, the government kept its promise
    to "urgently identify the families below the starvation line and
    implement effective support programs for such families within
    three months." However, its statement that "correcting income
    distribution and protecting poor segments of society will be taken
    into consideration in all kinds of arrangements to be made in the
    field of social policies" was not totally adhered to. Mean while the
    promise that "basic education and health support will be provided
    to children of poor families" was also kept; poor families now get
    regular state aid for their school-age children.

    Meanwhile there were scandals in state-run childcare, like that
    at the Malatya orphanage where toddlers were seriously beaten and
    abused. Elsewhere some youngsters supposedly under state protection
    were proven to be missing.

    The government at the education sector promised administrative and
    academic autonomy along with the restructuring of the Higher Education
    Board (YOK). The government prepared a draft bill on the matter, but
    since it included the removal of obstacles to imam-hatip high school
    graduates entering universities, the bill was vetoed by President
    Ahmet Necdet Sezer. The government did not pursue the matter.

    --Boundary_(ID_t+q9LTUC6w+2OwSe3iwT5Q)--
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