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  • Human Rights Watch Calls On Turkish Authorities To Amend The Laws Th

    Human Rights Watch calls on Turkish authorities to amend the laws that have resulted in the arbitrary and punitive application of terrorism charges against demonstrators

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    November 1, 2010 - 21:01 AMT 17:01 GMT

    Human Rights Watch unequivocally condemns the October 31, 2010 suicide
    bomb attack in Istanbul. It is essential that Turkey's response targets
    the perpetrators, not legitimate dissenters, Human Rights Watch said. A
    Human Rights Watch report released documents the use of anti-terror
    laws to prosecute hundreds of Kurdish demonstrators as though they were
    armed militants, violating free expression, association, and assembly.

    The 75-page report, "Protesting as a Terrorist Offense: The Arbitrary
    Use of Terrorism Laws to Prosecute and Incarcerate Demonstrators in
    Turkey," is based on a review of 50 cases. It describes 26 cases of
    individuals prosecuted for terrorism even though they had nothing
    to do with violence such as the October 31 attack, but simply for
    taking part in protests deemed by the government to be sympathetic
    to the outlawed armed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Hundreds of
    Kurdish demonstrators are currently in prison pending the outcome of
    their trials or appeals against convictions. Others are serving long
    sentences that have been upheld by Turkey's top court of appeal.

    "When it comes to the Kurdish question, the courts in Turkey are all
    too quick to label political opposition as terrorism," said Emma
    Sinclair-Webb, Turkey researcher at Human Rights Watch and author
    of the report. "When you close off the space for free speech and
    association, it has the counterproductive effect of making armed
    opposition more attractive."

    Over the past three years, courts have relied on broadly drafted
    terrorism laws introduced as provisions of the 2005 Turkish Penal
    Code, plus case law, to prosecute demonstrators. The courts have ruled
    that merely being present at a demonstration that the PKK encouraged
    people to attend amounts to acting under PKK orders. Demonstrators
    have been punished severely for acts of terrorism even if their
    offence was making a victory sign, clapping, shouting a PKK slogan,
    throwing a stone, or burning a tire.

    The report calls on the Turkish authorities to amend the laws that
    have resulted in the arbitrary and punitive application of terrorism
    charges against demonstrators, to suspend ongoing prosecutions
    against demonstrators under these laws, and to review the cases of
    those already convicted, Human Rights Watch official website reported.




    From: A. Papazian
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