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  • Possibilities of prosecuting Turkish leaders for crimes against huma

    Kurdish Media, UK
    Nov 3 2006

    Possibilities of prosecuting Turkish leaders for crimes against
    humanity and war crimes - I

    11/3/2006 KurdishMedia.com - By Karim Salih
    A critical analysis of the possibilities of prosecuting Turkish
    leaders for crimes against humanity and war crimes since the military
    coup in 1980 - Part I

    "I have the conviction that as long as a nation does the best for its
    own interests, and succeeds, the world admires it and thinks it
    moral." [1]
    - Talaat Pasha, the architect of the Armenian destruction
    (1915-1922), in 1915

    Abstract

    The 1980 military coup has been considered by many Turkish academics
    and human rights groups a turning point in the Turkish history in
    terms of both the scale and the extent of brutality of human rights
    abuses. The atrocities perpetrated against Kurdish civilians,
    according to Turkish and international human rights defenders, have
    increased since 1984 under the guise of legitimacy of addressing
    security concerns.

    I intend to explore and catalogue a possible international case
    against Turkish political and military leaders for injuries inflicted
    on the Kurdish civilians in Turkey since the 1980 coup. I will discus
    the criticisms of partiality and prejudice that arise with arbitrary
    decisions to prosecute crimes against international law committed in
    some internal armed conflicts but not others of arguably equal
    brutality. I will contend that bringing into justice those suspected
    of international crimes and establishment of a realistic picture,
    based on the historical facts of past deeds are critical
    preconditions for achieving an everlasting and just peace, and the
    development of democratic society that could advance the cause of
    democracy and human rights not only in Turkey but in the whole of
    West Asia.

    Why this paper?

    On November 9, 2005, the suspected bombers of a bookstore in Semdinli
    in Turkey's Kurdish southeast were apprehended on the scene by the
    surviving victims and their arms and identity cards that belonged to
    Turkish security forces were published by Kurdish activists on the
    internet on the same day. Unlike previous similar bombings against
    institutions and individuals who asserted their Kurdish identity,
    this incident attracted domestic and international attention and
    deepened the controversy of who wields the real power in Turkey.

    When Turkish authorities in April 2006, in a bid to defuse the
    tension between the government and the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK),
    released the suspected bombers and dismissed the prosecutor who
    prosecuted them, former President Suleyman Demirel stated that Turkey
    had not changed very much since the 1980 coup, explaining that "There
    is the state and there is the deep state ... When a small difficulty
    occurs, the civilian state steps back and the deep state becomes the
    generator (of decisions)."

    Until Turkey succeeds in reining in the military and eliminating
    torture, the Kurdish population and the other Anatolian minorities
    seems are destined to encounter more of the Turkish deep state
    institutions than the legitimate state.

    I believe that opening up debate over the criminal liability under
    international law for forced disappearances, torture and extra
    judicial killings, though understandably taboo in Turkey (for a
    society structured along authoritarian lines, such a debate raises
    fears of potentially destabilizing consequences), it may help the
    cause of democracy and human rights that so far countless of
    Anatolians have lost their lives on its course.

    Introduction

    In contrast to the 1974 Greek transition from seven year military
    dictatorship to democracy which accompanied criminal prosecutions of
    the junta leaders for torture and other crimes, [2] in Turkey the
    leaders of the 12 September 1980 not only remained unprosecuted after
    three years of direct military rule, but retained influence over the
    political administration through the National Security Council (Milli
    Guvenlik Kurulu - MGK) which they had entrenched in the 1982
    Constitution of the Republic of Turkey. [3] Twenty six years on and
    the unresolved legacy of the coup is increasingly reported to provoke
    vile crimes [4] amid accusations, from impartial bodies, of military
    disrespecting the legal order. [5]

    This paper will attempt to reach prima facie conclusions on criminal
    liability in international law for alleged wrongs committed since
    1980 in Turkey as well as to assess the available prosecutorial
    options and the possibilities of enforcement.

    Following presenting a brief historical overview of the modern
    republic of Turkey, ideas and practices of Kemalism, Turkey's
    official ideology since 1923, will be examined with some focus on
    international indifference toward the plight of Armenians until 1923
    and the Kurds thereafter as well as a particular interest in
    military's role in the politics leading up to the 1980 coup. Starting
    with a brief presentation of human rights record during the three
    years following the 1980 coup, Part II will review the evidence
    documented by independent bodies regarding destruction of villages
    and forced displacement, torture, and extra-judicial executions and
    forced disappearances respectively emphasising in particular on the
    alleged involvement of state. This will be followed by a brief
    appraisal of Turkey's international obligations.

    Part III will examine the relevant rules of international law on
    crimes against humanity following an assessment of the conceptual
    evolution of these crimes and the early failings. Next, the concept
    of war crimes in internal armed conflicts will be discussed. The
    status of crime of torture as a discrete crime under international
    law will be analysed. Part IV will attempt to apply the relevant
    provisions of law to a selection of the available evidence in
    relation to crimes against humanity, war crimes and torture
    respectively. The requirement of the legality principle will be
    thoroughly analysed, employing the ICTY and ICTR jurisprudence as
    well as judgments by national courts when appropriate. Part V will
    explore the possible venues for accountability, evaluating the
    advantages and disadvantages of each option of a special court in
    Turkey, the ICC and an ad hoc international criminal tribunal
    respectively.

    Finally, Part V will attempt to critically analyse the possibilities
    of enforcing international criminal law especially in the case of a
    NATO ally like Turkey. This paper will expound a view that pursuing
    criminal accountability for serious violations of international law,
    though not a panacea, is morally and legally imperative and would
    contribute to international peace and security in the long run. It
    will be contended that biased selective enforcement of international
    criminal law on arbitrary basis questions the generality of the law
    which is a prerequisite to its legitimacy.

    I. The creation of the Republic of Turkey

    After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the World War I, the Peace
    Treaty of Sèvres was signed in August 1920 which provided for the
    dismantling of the Empire and the formation of Armenian [6] and
    Kurdish states along a Turkish republic. [7] The modern "Turkey", led
    by Mustafa Kemal (surnamed Ataturk "Father of the Turks" in 1934),
    [8] "smashed its way" [9] out of Sèvres and into modern
    nation-statehood in 1923 in Anatolia [10] where Greeks, Armenians,
    Kurds and Assyrians had coexisted for millennia. [11]

    On the way to nationhood, the Turkish nationalists Committee of Union
    and Progress (CUP), who ruled from 1913 to the collapse of Empire in
    1918, engaged in the destruction of the Armenians in 1915-17 that
    resulted in the death of up to one and half million Armenians, almost
    half of the population. [12] After the war was ended, the British
    High Commissioner, in January 1919, informed the Turkish Foreign
    Minister that Great Britain is "resolved to have proper punishment
    inflicted on those responsible for the Armenian massacres". [13]
    Ottoman court-martials, in deed, tried a number of persons and found,
    in absentia, some Young Turk leaders including Talaat Pasha guilty of
    "the organization and execution of the crime of massacre" against the
    Armenian population under Articles 45 and 170 of the Ottoman Penal
    Code. [14]

    Rejecting capitulation of the Ottoman sultan to the Great Britain,
    Mustafa Kemal established a counter-government in Ankara in April
    1919 and a parliament, named "Grand National Assembly of Turkey
    Turkiye Buyuk Millet Meclisi - TBMM" in April 1920. [15] Following
    the withdrawal of French troops from Cilicia in May 1922, [16] the
    Greek forces were repelled and the city of Smyrna (present-day Izmir)
    in September 1922 was captured by Kemal troops. [17] According to
    some accounts, 200.000 of its indigenous Greek population and
    Armenian "refugees" were massacred and the city was later set alight.
    [18]

    After his military triumph, Kemal was able to influence the
    provisions of the Treaty of Lausanne (24 July 1923) [19] which
    replaced the Sèvres Treaty. [20] The new Treaty not only made no
    reference to autonomous Armenia or Kurdistan but contained a
    'Declaration of Amnesty' for all offences committed between 1 August
    1914 and 20 November 1922. [21] The CUP members, including those
    convicted for the mass killing of Armenians by the Istanbul
    authorities in 1918-1920, had already been granted a general amnesty
    by the Ankara government of Mustafa Kemal on 31 March 1923. [22] Many
    of the CUP members became ardent Kemalists and some served as
    ministers in the modern Republic of Turkey which was officially
    proclaimed on 29 October 1923. [23]

    Kemalism: changing society in short order

    The ideology of Kemalism has been enshrined in 1982 Constitution as
    sacrosanct[24] which cannot be amended; [25] even proposals to do so
    may constitute a criminal offence. [26] According to Randal, like
    Italian fascism, Kemalism was characterised by a pivotal feature of
    the urge to transform and modernise what they saw as a "corrupt
    society" through the power of the state to enforce, be it violently,
    "an exclusive racialism". [27] To modernise the "corrupt" Ottoman
    society, Kemal imposed radical social, legal, and political reforms
    that included outlawing the traditional dress code, changing from
    Arabic to Latin script and adopting new civil and penal codes based
    on European models. [28]

    Turkification, expressed by Kemal as "How happy I am to be a Turk",
    [29] was imposed on the whole population, regardless of their ethnic
    roots, language, culture, and religious practices. [30] Even until
    early 1990s, school children were taught "Universal Turkish History"
    and its complement "Sun Language Theory", according which, all
    peoples and world civilisations originated from the Turks, and
    Turkish language was the first spoken language in the development of
    mankind and is the source of all existing world languages. [31]

    The Kurds in Anatolia, who at present account for over half of the
    Kurds worldwide and up to a quarter of Turkey's population, [32]
    supported Kemal's nationalist army in 1919-23 war on promises of
    "equality" and "a meaningful autonomy" in the new state. [33] As soon
    as the new borders of Turkey were secured in the Treaty of Lausanne,
    Kemal began to expel Kurdish members of the government and TBMM. [34]
    In March 1924, measures were issued proscribing Kurdish political,
    educational and cultural associations, and banning Kurdish language
    in a clear breach of Articles 38, 39 of the Treaty of Lausanne. [35]
    The wards "Kurd" and "Kurdistan" were banned as the Kurds came to be
    called "mountain Turks" and the Kurdish names of over 20,000
    settlements were replaced with Turkish names. [36]

    The Kemalist leaders tried little to hide the ultra nationalist drive
    behind the imposition of Turkification on the Anatolian ethnic
    communities. In 1925, the Turkish Prime Minister Ismet Pasha
    (surnamed "Inonu" in 1934) [37] , publicly stated "[w]e are openly
    nationalist... Besides the Turkish majority, none of the other elements
    shall have any impact. We shall, at any price, Turkicize those who
    live in our country, and destroy those who rise up against the Turks
    and Turkdom." [38] The suppression of resistance to Turkification
    culminated in the Dersim massacre of 1937-38, [39] which according to
    Bruinessen, "undoubtedly, was massive, indiscriminate, and
    excessively brutal". [40] According to eye-witness accounts many
    tribes of Dersim, including those who surrendered, [41] as well as
    the population of some villages and bigger settlements were
    annihilated. [42] These accounts have, according to Bruinessen, been
    confirmed by documents published by the War History Department, which
    give a detailed account of the military operations. [43]

    Similar to Armenian massacres in 1915-22, this large scale
    mass-murder did not go unnoticed in the West. [44] However in both
    cases, much like the genocide of the Jews in 1939-45, the West did
    not raise a finger in support of the vulnerable groups. If one reason
    of western indifference to the atrocities perpetrated by the Turkish
    armed forces had been purely political, viz., Turkey was wanted to
    serve as a bulwark against Bolshevism; the other may have been what
    Leo Kuper called the "sovereign right to commit genocide" within the
    national borders. [45] It is not a surprise that the western states
    paid admiration and more attention to the secularist nature of the
    Kemalist regime rather than its domestic brutal practices.

    Militarism and democracy

    Twelve years after the death of the "Eternal Leader", [46] Turkey
    held its first open elections which led to the victory of the
    opposition Democratic Party. [47] The Turkish army, which
    traditionally proclaims itself as "the protector of the State" and
    the "custodian of the Ataturk ideology", [48] overthrew the elected
    government of Adnan Menderes in May 1960 and executed him along with
    two of his cabinet members in September. [51] The generals, driven by
    the statist ideology of Kemalism, brought down another elected
    government in 1971. [50]

    In the mid 1970s, political violence between the left and right
    movements was on the rise. Much of the violence was carried out by
    "Grey Wolves" the armed wing of the "Nationalist Action Party (MHP)",
    headed by Alparslan Turkes, a leader of the 1960 coup. Martial law
    was imposed on much of the South-east where the left, despite army
    support to MHP, was particularly strong. [52]

    Justifying intervention on the basis of restoring order and ending
    "civil war", [54] Turkish armed forces led by its commander, General
    Kenan Evren, deposed the elected government on 12 September 1980.
    [54] The army abrogated the constitution, closed down the parliament
    and all political parties, and imposed martial law throughout the
    country. [55]

    notes

    1. Quoted in Dadrian, Vahakn N., The History of the Armenian
    Genocide: Ethnic Conflict from the Balkans to Anatolia to the
    Caucasus (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 383.

    2. Kritz, Neil J., "Where We Are and How We Got Here: An Overview of
    Developments in the Search for Justice and Reconciliation", in Alice
    H. Henkin (Ed.), The Legacy of Abuse: Confronting the Past and Facing
    the Future (Washington DC: Aspen Institute, 2002), pp. 21-46, at 24,
    26. For an extensive analysis, see Roehrig, Terence, The Prosecution
    of Former Military Leaders in Newly Democratic Nations: The Cases of
    Argentina, Greece, and South Africa (Jefferson, North Carolina:
    McFarland and Co., 2002), pp. 1-29, 116-185.

    3. The Constitution of the Republic of Turkey, available at the
    official website of the Turkish parliament, Article 118 (As amended
    on 17 October2001), , (last visited 30 August 2006).

    4. Turkish Daily News, Editorial, "Kurdish impasse key factor in
    rising rate of lynchings", TDN Ankara, 18 September 2006 (Turkish
    Daily News - TDN asserts that "politicians, some of Turkey's most
    renowned academics, civil society representatives..." shared the
    assessment that the legacy of the 1980 coup "has much to do" with the
    rising scale of lynching and attempted lynching "directed either at
    people of Kurdish origin or those who have been outspoken in their
    defense of the Kurdish cause").

    5. Turkish Daily News, Editorial, "Kretschmer: Military does not
    respect legal order", TDN Ankara, 23 September 2006 (the EU
    representative in Turkey, focusing on the "dominance of the Turkish
    military's role in politics", blamed the army ad security organs for
    "playing their own games, outside the control of the civilian
    authorities, disrespecting the legal and institutional order").

    6. The Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and
    Turkey (Signed at Sèvres August 10, 1920), Section VI, Articles
    88-93, available at , (last visited 12 August 2006).

    7. Ibid, Section 111, Articles 63-65.

    8. The Surname Law, November 1934; see, Yildiz, K and G Fryer, The
    Kurds: Culture and Language Rights (London: KHRP, August 2004), pp.
    16-7.

    9. Levene, Mark "Creating a Modern 'Zone of Genocide': The Impact of
    Nation and State-Formation on Eastern Anatolia, 1878-1923", Holocaust
    and Genocide Studies, Volume 12, No.3, 1998, pp 393-433, at 433;
    Levene, Mark, "Why Is the Twentieth Century the Century of Genocide",
    Journal of World History, Vol. 11, No. 2, 2000, pp. 305-36, at 336.

    10. "Anatolia" is roughly the Asian part of the modern Republic of
    Turkey, east of the Sea of Marmara, while the European part of modern
    Turkey is part of Eastern Thrace. See Library of Congress, Federal
    Research Division, "Country Profile: Turkey", January 2006, , (last
    visited 08 August 2006). The word "Anatolia" will be used when
    necessary for its lack of ethnic connotation in lieu of "Turkey" in
    this paper,

    11. McDowall, David, A Modern History of the Kurds (London and New
    York: I.B.Tauris, 1997).

    12. Dadrian, 1995, p. 382.

    13. The Foreign Office, 371/4174/118377 (folio 253), cited in
    Schabas, William, Genocide in International Law (Cambridge: Cambridge
    University Press, 2000), p. 21.

    14. Ibid.

    15. McDowall, David, The Kurds, a Nation Denied (London: Minority
    Rights Publications, 1992), p. 32.

    16. Ibid.

    17. Dadrian, 1995, p. 271.

    18. Horton, George, The Blight of Asia (New York: The Bobbs-Merrill
    Company, 1926).

    19. The Treaty of Peace with Turkey Signed at Lausanne, July 24,
    1923, , (last visited 14 September 2006).

    20. For an extensive analysis of the Western indifference towards the
    suffering Armenians and their cooperation with the nascent Kemalism,
    see generally, Bloxham, Donald, The Great Game of Genocide:
    Imperialism, Nationalism, and the Destruction of the Ottoman
    Armenians (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005).

    21. Supra, note 19, Article 140.

    22. Hofmann, Tessa, "Annihilation, Impunity, Denial: The Case Study
    of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire (1915/16) and Genocide
    Research in Comparison", University of Tokyo, 27 March 2004.

    23. Ibid.

    24. Article 2 of The Constitution of the Republic of Turkey, supra
    note 3, proclaims Turkey a "democratic, secular, and social state
    governed by the rule of law....loyal to the nationalism of Ataturk".

    25. Article 4, ibid, declares that Article 2 "cannot be amended nor
    can its amendment be put forward."

    26. Under the law to protect Ataturk (No. 5816 - 1951).

    27. Randal, Johnathan, After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness: My
    Encounters with Kurdistan (New York: Westview, 1999), p. 252.

    28. McDowall, 1992, pp. 4-5.

    29. Randal, 1999, p. 267, p. 258; Kendal, 1980, p. 67.

    30. Randal, 1999, p. 267.

    31. Kendal, 1980, p. 68, and the list of references; Gerger, Haluk,
    "Crisis in Turkey", Middle East Research Associates (MERA),
    Occasional Paper No. 28, December 1997.

    32. See, e.g., Michael Gunter, "Why Kurdish Statehood is Unlikely?"
    Middle East Policy Vol. XI No 1 Spring 2004. The CIA estimate of
    Kurdish percentage in Turkey is 20%; see United States Central
    Intelligence Agency, The World Factbook: Turkey, updated on 7
    September, 2006, , (last visited 12 August 2006).

    33. Olson, Robert, "Kurds and Turks: Two Documents concerning Kurdish
    Autonomy in 1922 and 1923", Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern
    Studies, Vol. 15, Winter 1991, pp. 20-31.

    34. McDowall 1997, p. 198-200.

    35. McDowall 1997, p. 200; for details see Yildiz and Fryer, 2004,
    p.23. See Articles 38, 39 of the Lausanne Treaty, supra note 19.

    36. McDowall 1997, p. 200; As early as 2005, Turkey changed the
    scientific Latin names of certain animals to remove reference to
    "Kurdistan" and "Armenia"; see, BBC News, "Turkey renames 'divisive'
    animals", 8 March 2005.

    37. Ismet Inonu became the first Prime Minister of Turkey in November
    1923 and, after the death of Kemal Ataturk, became President from
    November 1938 to May 1950. After the 1960 military coup he served
    again as Prime Minister in November 1961- February 1965.

    38. Address to the Turk Ocaklari in Ankara, 21 April 1925. Quoted in
    Bruinessen, Martin van, "Genocide in Kurdistan? The Suppression of
    the Dersim Rebellion in Turkey (1937-38) and the chemical war against
    the Iraqi Kurds (1988)", in George J. Andreopoulos (Ed.), Conceptual
    and Historical Dimensions of Genocide (University of Pennsylvania
    Press, 1994), pp. 141-170, 145, citing Guney Aslan, Uniformali
    kasaplar (Butchers in uniform), (Istanbul: Pencere Yayinlari, 1990).

    39. Bruinessen, 1994.

    40. Ibid.

    41. Ibid; Kendal, [cf. Nezan], "Kurdistan in Turkey", in Gerard
    Chaliand (Ed.), People without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan
    (London: Zed Books, 1980), pp. 47-106, p. 67; McDowall, 1997,p. 208;
    Dr. Sivan, Kurt millet hareketleri ve Irak'ta Kurdistan ihtilali
    [Kurdish national movements and the revolution of Kurdistan in Iraq],
    (Stockholm, 1975), quoted in Bruinessen, 1994: ("[w]omen and children
    of [the tribes who surrendered] were locked into hayshed and burnt
    alive").

    42. M. Nuri Dersimi, Kurdistan tarihinde Dersim [Dersim in the
    history of Kurdistan], (Aleppo, 1952). Quoted in Bruinessen, 1994:
    ("the inhabitants of Hozat town...men, women and children, were
    brought near the military camp outside Hozat and killed by machine
    gun").

    43. Bruinessen, 1994.

    44. Report from the Pro-Consul in Trebizond to Sir Percy Loraine,
    'Memorandum on military operations in Dersim, 27 September 1938'
    (Great Britain, Public Records Office, FO 371/21925, Document
    E5961/69/44), quoted in McDowall, 1997, p. 209; and Bruinessen, 1994
    (in one paragraph the British report reads: "the military authorities
    have used methods similar to those used against the Armenians during
    the Great War: thousands of Kurds including women and children were
    slain, others, mostly children, were thrown into the Euphrates... It is
    now stated that the Kurdish question no longer exists in Turkey").

    45. Leo Kuper, "The Sovereign Territorial State: The Right to
    Genocide", in R.P. Claude and B.H. Weston (Eds.), Human Rights in the
    World Community (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
    1989), pp. 56-64.

    46. Ataturk was referred to as "Ebedi Sef" meaning the Eternal
    Leader; see, Kendal, 1980, p. 71.

    47. Ibid, p. 78.

    48. On the role of military in Turkish politics, see, Rouleau, Eric,
    "Military with Political Power: Turkey's Modern Pashas", Le Monde
    Diplomatique, September 2000; Ozcan, Gencer, "The Military and the
    Making of Foreign Policy in Turkey", in Kirisci, Kemal and Barry
    Rubin, (Eds.): Turkey in World Politics: An Emerging Multiregional
    Power, London: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2001), pp. 16-20.

    49. Kendal, 1980, p. 79.

    50. Gerger, 1997

    51. Ibid.

    52. Ibid.

    53. See the Preamble to 1982 Constitution, supra note 3, before it
    was amended in June 1995: "Following the operation carried out on 12
    September 1980 by the Turkish Armed Forces in response to a call from
    the Turkish Nation, of which they form an inseparable part, at a time
    when the approach of a separatist, destructive and bloody civil war
    unprecedented in the Republican era threatened the integrity of the
    eternal Turkish Nation and motherland and the existence of the sacred
    Turkish State.", the full online text is available at , (last visited
    12 September 2006).

    54. United Kingdom Home Office, "Country Report: Turkey", Country
    Information and Policy Unit, October 2003, para. 4.1 [hereinafter UK
    HO 2003].

    55. Ibid

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