TURKEY
 
CASE N° TK/41 - HATIP DICLE 
CASE N° TK/67 - MUSTAFA BALBAY 
CASE N° TK/68 - MEHMET HABERAL 
CASE N° TK/69 - GÜLSER YILDIRIM (Ms.) 
CASE N° TK/70 - SELMA IRMAK (Ms.)
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CASE N° TK/71 - FAYSAL SARIYILDIZ 
CASE N° TK/72 - IBRAHIM AYHAN 
CASE N° TK/73 - KEMAL AKTAS 
CASE N° TK/74 - ENGIN ALAN |  
 
Resolution adopted unanimously by the IPU Governing Council at its 191st session 
(Québec, 24 October 2012)
 
The Governing Council of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Having before it the cases of the above-mentioned parliamentarians of Turkey, elected in  the June 2011 parliamentary elections,  which has been examined by the Committee on the Human Rights of  Parliamentarians, pursuant to its Procedure for the treatment by the  Inter-Parliamentary Union of communications concerning violations of the human  rights of members of parliament,
 
Taking into account the information  provided by the Turkish delegation, led by the President of the Turkish IPU  Group, to the 127th IPU Assembly (Quebec, October 2012) on the  occasion of a hearing with the Committee and the latest communications from the  President of the Turkish IPU Group; also  taking into account the information provided by the sources in these cases,  
Recalling  that Mr. Balbay and Mr. Haberal were elected on the list of the  Republican People’s Party, Mr. Alan on the list of the National Action  Party and the six others as members of the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy  Party, that the persons in question were all certified by the Supreme Election  Board (YSK) while in detention as eligible candidates for the legislative  elections, and that, once elected, their petitions for release to enable them  to take up their parliamentary duties were rejected by the competent courts,  
Considering the  following information on file on their individual situations: 
- Regarding  Mr. Balbay:
 
Mr. Balbay  was reportedly arrested at the beginning of 2009 and is being prosecuted on  charges of being a member of an organization, Ergenekon, conspiring to  destabilize and overthrow the ruling Justice and Development Party. The source  affirms that he was the Ankara correspondent for Cumhuriyet, a long-running  daily in Turkey, that he was a well-known critic of the government, and that he  had been briefly detained in July 2008. Although he stopped working at the  newspaper, the source affirms that he continued to criticize the government and  was again arrested in 2009 on the grounds that the police had recovered  previously deleted data in the computer seized during his first arrest.  According to the source, the information obtained is nothing more than  journalistic notes, which Mr. Balbay had already published in his books.  
 - Regarding Mr. Haberal:
 
Mr. Haberal  was reportedly arrested around the same time as Mr. Balbay and faces the  same charges. According to the source, Mr. Haberal is a physician and is  well-known for his social work. It affirms that the prosecutor accuses him of  using his meetings to discuss plans to overthrow the government. According to  the source, these meetings were no more than brain-storming exercises attended  by politicians, including two MPs from the governing  party, and civil servants.  
 - Regarding  Mr. Alan:
 
  Mr. Alan  was prosecuted as part of the “Sledgehammer case”, which is the name of an  alleged Turkish secularist military coup plan reportedly dating back to 2003. A judgement was handed  down in this case on 21 September 2012. Mr. Alan was convicted and  sentenced to a prison term of 18 years.  
 - Regarding Ms. Yildirim, Mr. Ayhan,  Mr. Aktas, Ms. Irmak and Mr. Sariyildiz:
 
The  five independent parliamentarians are all being prosecuted for crimes against  the constitutional order, in particular membership of the Kurdish Communities  Union (KCK), said to be the urban wing of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).  They were reportedly arrested between December 2009 and April 2010, with the  exception of Mr. Ayhan, who was arrested in October 2010.  
 - Regarding  Mr. Dicle:
- Mr. Dicle has been in detention  since December 2009 in  relation to the KCK case.
 
 - He was convicted and sentenced in 2009 at first instance to a prison sentence of one  year and eight months, pursuant to Article 7/2 of the Anti-Terror Law, in  connection with a statement he made to the ANKA news agency in October 2007  with respect to the unilateral ceasefire declared by the PKK in 2006 and to the  subsequent reportedly intensified attacks by the army. Mr. Dicle  reportedly stated, “… this ceasefire has become invalid. The PKK will use its  legitimate right of defence unless the army stops the operations.”
  - The Supreme Court of Appeals upheld the judgement on  22 March 2011. After registering the criminal record, the ruling  was submitted to the YSK on 9 June 2011. The President of the Turkish IPU Group affirms that, at that point,  under the Electoral Law, the YSK was no longer in a position to make any  changes to the final list of candidates for the elections, which explains why  it was possible for Mr. Dicle to stand for election but his election  subsequently invalidated.
  - Mr. Dicle, whose seat has been  attributed to a member of the ruling party, has submitted a petition to the  European Court of Human Rights alleging that his rights under the European  Convention on Human Rights have been violated,
     
Recalling that, with respect to all nine cases, the source  has raised serious questions about the length of the proceedings, which appear  not to be advancing and in which many of the accused have not yet been able to  present their defence, and affirms that no concrete facts have been presented to  justify the detention decisions,
Also recalling that the source affirms that some of the evidence against the accused  has been fabricated by the investigators, that most of the detentions are based  on unsigned anonymous letters and that the computers of the accused have been  tampered with; further recalling that  the source also affirms that all the persons who stand accused in these cases  are known to be in opposition to the present government, that the government  fully controls the Supreme Board for Judges and Prosecutors in charge of the  judicial system, and that there is direct political interference in the cases,  
Considering the following: according to the  President of the Turkish IPU Group, the Ergenekon and Sledgehammercases have to be seen against the  background of repeated interference, including coups d’état, by the military in  national politics in the recent history of Turkey; the parliamentarians  concerned were/are accused as part of extremely complex criminal cases  concerning multiple suspects; the parliamentary human rights committee has  visited the parliamentarians in detention, concluded that their conditions were  appropriate, and adopted a report to this effect which can be made available;  the Turkish parliament recently amended the criminal code of procedure with a  view to expediting legal proceedings and facilitating the release of those  standing accused in cases such as the ones at hand; however, the courts have  refused to grant the parliamentarians provisional release on the grounds that  the crimes of which they are accused are very serious and their release may  jeopardize the collection of evidence, 
Bearing in mind that Turkey is party to  the European Convention on Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil  and Political Rights, and is therefore bound to respect the right to freedom of  expression, the right to liberty and the right to participate in political  life,  
- Thanks the President of  the Turkish IPU Group for her extensive cooperation; 
  - Appreciates the fact  that the Turkish parliament has taken an active interest in these cases and  adopted legislation affording its members in preventive detention the  opportunity to benefit from provisional release, thus enabling them to exercise  the mandate entrusted to them by their constituents; is concerned, therefore, that the courts have not released the  parliamentarians in question, all the more so as their detention is allegedly  the result of unfounded legal proceedings and as some of them have already been  deprived of their liberty for three years; trusts that a close analysis of the new legislation, of which the Turkish  delegation has undertaken to provide a copy, will shed further light in this  regard; would also appreciate receiving a copy of the relevant court decisions in this respect and of the  ruling handed down on Mr. Alan; 
  - Considers that, in the light of the  complexity and seriousness of the cases at hand, an on-site mission would be  timely and enable it to obtain first-hand information and thus acquire a better  understanding of the precise  charges, the facts adduced to substantiate them, the state of the  investigations and proceedings and the prospects for the members in preventive  detention to participate fully in the work of parliament; considers that this mission would also enhance its comprehension of  the facts and legal grounds underpinning Mr. Dicle’s latest conviction, in particular in the  light of earlier concerns it expressed in a case in which he and three others,  Ms. Zana, Mr. Sadak and Mr. Dogan, were convicted on a similar  charge and sentenced, after two mistrials, to a harsh prison term; 
  - Is pleased, therefore, that the President  of the Turkish IPU Group concurs that an on-site mission, which would meet with  the parliamentary, executive and judicial authorities and the parliamentarians  concerned, could be conducive to promoting such understanding, including with  regard to the context in which the different criminal proceedings in these  cases have to be seen; 
  - Requests the Secretary General to  arrange for the mission to take place as early as possible and to pursue his  exchanges with the parliamentary authorities for this purpose; requests him also to convey a copy of  this resolution to the sources;  
  - Requests the Committee to continue  examining these cases and to report back to it in due course.
  
 
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