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Turkey to sentence UK teacher to 5-year jail term over PKK links

April 29, 2016 By administrator

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Chris Stephenson, a British computer sciences lecturer who works at Bilgi university in Istanbul, Turkey

Turkish juridical officials are to hand down a five-year jail sentence to a British university lecturer on charges of spreading “terror propaganda” for the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

Turkish prosecutors have brought criminal indictment against Chris Stephenson, a computer sciences lecturer who works at Bilgi university in Istanbul, and he would be most likely given a jail sentence of between one and five years, Dogan news agency reported.

Stephenson was arrested on March 15 after Turkish authorities alleged that he was carrying brochures in support of the PKK, accusing the Cambridge graduate of “making propaganda of a terror organization.”

The British scholar, in return, has disrupted the charges, arguing that he was detained only after he was found with a bilingual Newroz (Persian and Kurdish new year) celebration invitation with the signature of the provincial presidency of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, also known as the HDP.

Stephenson, who has lived in Turkey for 25 years, is a staunch supporter of four Turkish academics, who signed a petition late last year and denounced the Turkish government’s campaign against the PKK.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in return, dismissed the petition and said it helps the PKK militants “achieve their goals.”

“It might be the terrorist who pulls the trigger and detonates the bomb, but it is these supporters and accomplices who allow that attack to achieve its goal,” he said.

Meanwhile, Turkish officials are to deport a Finnish author from Turkey over alleged “links to terrorism.”

Taina Niemela was detained in the restive eastern Turkish province of Van on April 28 after she attended a funeral for a slain PKK member.

A ceasefire between the PKK and the Turkish government collapsed in July 2015 and attacks on Turkish security forces have soared ever since.

President Erdogan said earlier this month that 355 members of the Turkish security forces and over 5,000 Kurdish militants have been killed in operations against the outlawed group.

Ankara has been engaged in a large-scale campaign against the PKK in its southern border region in the past few months. The Turkish military has also been conducting offensives against the positions of the group in northern Iraq and Syria.

The operations began in the wake of a deadly July 2015 bombing in the southern Turkish town of Suruc. More than 30 people died in the attack, which the Turkish government blamed on the Daesh Takfiri terrorist group.

After the bombing, the PKK militants, who accuse the government in Ankara of supporting Daesh, engaged in a series of supposed reprisal attacks against Turkish police and security forces, in turn prompting the Turkish military operations.

source: presstv

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 5-year, jail, over, PKK links, sentence, term, Turkey, UK teacher

ROMANIA Azeri caviar diplomacy sends a former MEP in prison

March 8, 2016 By administrator

g-480x321Caught by a corruption scandal that had splashed the European Parliament five years, former MEP Adrian Severin, a Romanian who openly defended the interests of Azerbaijan in the Strasbourg Assembly, was sentenced to a term of 3 years and 3 months in prison in Romania for trying to make changes to the legislation of the European Union in exchange for the sum of 100 000 euros, the Sunday Times reported.

The case, known as the “scandal of laws against cash” was stale in 2011 at the initiative of a team of journalists from the Sunday Times who had been posing as lobbyists and had proposed the money under this coverage to some 60 European parliamentarians who had to accept in part against adopting amendments carving in breach laws protecting bank customers in Europe. A. Severin, a former foreign minister of Romania, Zoran Thaler, former Foreign Minister of Slovenia and Ernst Strasser, former Foreign Minister of Austria had accepted the agreement and had fallen into the trap set by journalists , according to EurActiv group. As a result, the European Parliament, in a press release issued on 21 March 2011, had stated that “the national Department anti-corruption Romania was initiating proceedings against Severin on the basis of charges that between December 2010 and March 2011, he would have accepted to receive the sum of 100 000 euros proposed by representatives of a fictitious lobbying group ‘Taylor Jones Public Affairs’ (created from scratch for the occasion by the Sunday Times) “in exchange he would have committed to vote for amendments that would be favorable to them and reject those that are contrary to the interests of the group claimed they were supposed to represent.

The FOCUS News Agency reported that a video filmed by hidden camera by journalists shows the member agreeing to receive 4,000 euros per day for the mission entrusted to him. These overwhelming evidence encourage the European Parliament to lift the parliamentary immunity of A.Severin. After spending the agreement, A. Severin would have asked one of his colleagues who were not in the proposed amendment combines the false lobbyists had asked him to endorse. EurActiv reported an email sent by A. Severin reporters “just to let you know that you want the amendment was submitted on time”, followed by a mark of 12 000 euros charge for expected benefits ” services requested. “ A. Severin will defend later by saying he had done nothing illegal. But the political scandal could not be avoided.

The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) and the European Parliament launched an investigation into the corruption to punish parliamentarians involved. But as OLAF that ethical codes and conducts of the European Parliament highlighted the misuse of public funds rather than lobbying practices of a private group, it was also false. Also, the issue should be settled within the framework of the legislation of the countries of the parliamentarians concerned. Moreover, the press has reported excluding Severin of the Socialist Group in 2011, which did not prevent him to retain his seat in the European Parliament and to the normal end of his term in 2014. According to the Lawyer Herald, a site of legal, a conviction of Adrian Severin for bribes was possible under the Romanian Penal Code. Various media were quick to point out that MEPs involved were lobbying at the service of different powers.

Thus, the Russian Service of Radio France Internationale A.Severin had designated as a “stated lawyer of Azerbaijan”. The positions of A.Severin for Azerbaijan appeared with evidence when voting or written questions concerning this country, and the member makes no secret of his website. Already in 2008, in response to a speech by Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for Trade and European Neighbourhood Policy, in which she spoke about the Georgian crisis, and was part of the EU’s commitment to support Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova and integrity and territorial sovereignty, A.Severin issued a protest deploring “the omission of Azerbaijan in the speech of Commissioner Ferrero-Waldner.” In the process, he had asked the Commission to say whether it was “willing to prepare a plan to advance its relations and cooperation with Azerbaijan”.

In 2013, the Romanian MEP had sent another written question to the Commissioner for European Neighbourhood Policy. In this issue, he stressed that “Azerbaijan has an important regional role in the areas of energy security, the economy, geostrategy and culture.” He also made an inquiry about the “alternative” to the EU to set “the basis of a strategic partnership with Azerbaijan, including a statement of a clear and unanimous support of the EU’s territorial integrity Azerbaijan, at the Eastern Partnership summit in Vilnius “. He asked the Commission whether the EU was willing to sign an agreement on easing the visa regime with Azerbaijan. A.Severin is e last protagonists of the scandal to be sent to prison.

Ernst Strasser was sentenced to four years in 2013, Thaler and two and a half years in 2014. But for their part, unlike the Romanian politician, they had given up their seat when the scandal broke. But many other political leaders of different countries, the European Parliament and even the Council of Europe, continue with impunity to serve the interests of Azerbaijan, succumbing to his “caviar diplomacy” and oil, two commodities hit by the crisis yet today, caviar because of restrictions on sturgeon fishing in the Caspian and oil due to the sudden drop in its international prices, which hit hard the Azerbaijani economy which is heavily dependent.

Tuesday, March 8, 2016,
Gari © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, jail, MEP, Romania

Two Journalist out of Jail Another Turkish columnist faces four years in jail for ‘insulting Erdoğan’

February 26, 2016 By administrator

n_95771_1Prominent columnist Cengiz Çandar faces four years in jail for “insulting” President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in seven opinion pieces published on the Radikal news website.

The indictment prepared by Bakırköy Public Prosecutor Ertuğrul Sarıyar is based on a complaint filed by Erdoğan’s lawyer Ahmet Özel regarding seven of Çandar’s pieces published between July 26 and Aug. 19.
Çandar will be tried for violating Article 299 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK). If found guilty he faces between one to four years in prison.

The trial will begin on April 7.

Speaking to news website T24, Çandar said he received the written notice on Feb. 26, which he noted coincided with both President Erdoğan’s birthday and “Can Dündar and Erdem Gül’s release from prison.”

Imprisoned daily Cumhuriyet journalists Dündar and Gül were released from pre-trial detention after 92 days of imprisonment, after Turkey’s Constitutional Court ruled that their rights had been violated.

February/26/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Cengiz Candar, faces, jail, Journalist, Turkish

Another Turkish journalist end in Jail for insulting Erdogan

February 2, 2016 By administrator

cmh.thumbAn Istanbul prosecutor has demanded that daily Cumhuriyet columnist Özgür Mumcu be sentenced to four years and eight months in jail for “insulting” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Mumcu is being tried over an op-ed published on May 18, 2015 titled “Tyrant and a coward,” in which he blasted Erdoğan’s criticism of Hatice Cömert, the mother of Gezi protest victim Abdullah Cömert.

“It is well-known that tyrants are always fearful. They are so fearful that they would even file a complaint against someone like Abdullah Cömert’s mother,” the piece read.

During the first hearing of the case on Feb. 2 at Istanbul’s Çağlayan Courthouse, Mumcu denied that the article included any kind of insult.

“The piece is a critical text referring to [President Erdoğan] complaint against the mother of Abdullah Cömert after her statements following his death. This article was written following Erdoğan’s complaint, which had been widely reported in the media,” Mumcu said at the trial.

“As a columnist, I used my right to criticize. I’m a lawyer and professor myself. The testimonies and annexes that we have presented to court include samples of European Court of Human Rights [ECHR] rulings and also domestic laws. Therefore, I do not accept the accusations,” he added.

Hatice Özay, the lawyer of Erdoğan, defended the president’s case, saying Mumcu described him in the column as “a tyrant who oppresses his people, treating them without mercy.”

“We think this wording exceeds the limits of criticism. For these reasons, we demand a punishment for the defendant,” she said.

The court decided to postpone the proceedings, offering time to the lawyers of each side to present evidence and assertions.

In his defense, Mumcu also cited the case of Metin Lokumcu, who died of a heart attack in the Black Sea town of Hopa in 2011 during a police intervention against a protest.

He also referred to the case of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old boy who died after 269 days in coma having been shot in the head by a police tear gas canister during the Gezi Park protests. Mumcu described Erdoğan’s stated attitude on these incidents as “cold-hearted.”

Erdoğan was widely accused of encouraging his supporters to boo Elvan’s family at a public rally in 2014.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, insulting, jail, Journalist, Turkish

Turkey: US-based Turkish Imam, Fethullah Gülen, 121 others face life in jail

February 1, 2016 By administrator

U.S.-based Turkish Imam, Fethullah Gülen

U.S.-based Turkish Imam, Fethullah Gülen

ISTANBUL

The first court hearing was held in Istanbul on Feb. 1 in a case into the alleged creation of a terrorist organization, with U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen as one of the main defendants, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency has reported.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the Turkish government accuse Gülen of forming and heading a terrorist organization to topple the government, with alleged followers working as insiders in the police, the judiciary, and other state institutions.

A total of 122 defendants, including journalist Emre Uslu and former police chiefs Yurt Atayün and Ömer Köse, will be tried based on a 10,529-page indictment prepared by Istanbul Deputy Chief Public Prosecutor İrfan Fidan.

The 122 defendants are charged with “attempting to topple the government of the Republic of Turkey and preventing it from fully or partially conducting its duties.” Some 48 of them – including Gülen, Uslu, Atayün and Köse – are also charged with “obtaining and revealing confidential state data for political espionage purposes” and face aggravated life sentences.

Gülen, Uslu and Atayün are also charged with “forming or heading an armed terrorist organization,” “violating the right to privacy,” “obtaining personal data illegally,” “forgery of official documents” and “effacing, concealing or altering criminal evidence.” These charges carry sentences of up to 67 years, while other suspects in the case face jail sentences of varying lengths.

Some 968 people are named as complainants in the indictment, including Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, a number of ministers, the National Intelligence Agency (MİT) undersecretary, and a number of other high-level political figures.

Source: hurriyetdailynews

February/01/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Fethullah Gülen, jail, Turkey

Well-known Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov sentenced to 6 years in prison

December 28, 2015 By administrator

Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov

Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov

Baku Court of Grave Crimes sentenced Rauf Mirkadyrov, a well-known Azerbaijani journalist and contributor of the newspaper Zerkalo (Mirror), to 6 years in a colony of strict regime, Azerbaijani news agency Trend reports.

According to the report, the public prosecutor earlier demanded 7 years’ imprisonment for Mirkadirov. However, during the last hearing, the prosecutor asked the court to hand down a milder punishment to the journalist in accordance with the Article 62 of the Criminal Code of Azerbaijan, which offers a milder punishment for that concrete crime. The investigation was conducted by the Ministry of National Security.

Minval.az reports that Mirkadirov was charged under the Article 274 (high treason) of the Criminal Code. He is accused of taking part in the joint projects of the Institute for Peace of Democracy with the civil society groups of Armenia, and providing information supposed to be state secret during those events. The journalist denies the charge. Rights defenders consider him a political prisoner.

According to the website, the journalist’s deportation from Turkey to Azerbaijan, where he was immediately arrested on charges of espionage, drove the observers to maintain that Ankara and Baku might have been agreed on silencing their political opponents. When the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, visited Baku in March, the Turkish media reported about a dossier allegedly handed to the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev which included the names of the Turkish citizens residing in Azerbaijan, who were to be arrested. Those reports were about the supporters of the Turkish preacher Fethullah Gulen, who lives in the US. The Turkish authorities struggle against him both inside their country and abroad.

Rauf Mirkadyrov worked as a correspondent of the newspaper Zerkalo in Turkey. The Turkish authorities unexpectedly said he was deprived of the permission to work and had to leave the country immediately. According to the journalist, his pen fell ‘victim to a deal between Turkey and Azerbaijan.’

Minval.az further notes that Mirkadirov is not the only Azerbaijani journalist to be deported from Turkey. Mahir Zeynalov, well-known contributor for the Today’s Zaman daily, which is connected to Fethullah Gullen, was deported to Azerbaijan for unknown reasons in February.

Turan agency reports that the international community regards Mirkadirov as a prisoner of conscience as the real reason for his arrest was the authorities’ intention to convince the public of the spying and wrecking activities of Leyla Yunus, the rights defender, in whose projects Mirkadirov took part. According to the accusation, it were Leyla Yunus and her husband Arif who ‘recruited’ Rauf Mirkadirov as an Armenian spy. The charge of state treason against the couple was sent to separate proceedings, and they were sentenced on economic accusations. Consequently, their punishment was changed to conditional.

According to Report agency, Ilham Aliyev signed a decree on pardoning a number of sentenced individuals. Azay Guliyev, an MP from the commission on pardoning, said the decree was signed taking into account the appeals for pardoning addressed to the president by a number of sentenced people and their family members, authorised human rights representatives and organisations, as well as the individuals themselves, their health, family situation, their behaviour while serving the prison term, basing on the principles of humanism, in accordance with the 22nd item of the Article 109 of the Constitution of the Azerbaijani Republic. The pardoning list includes 210 people.
Meanwhile, Haqqin.az writes that the list of the convicts, pardoned by the presidential decree, included none of the political prisoners, on whose release the US Department of State, Council of Europe and other international groups insist.

On 23 December, a working group for compiling a comprehensive list of political prisoners issued a consecutive list of the Azerbaijani citizens regarded as political prisoners in the country. The list had 93 names, including well-known rights defenders, journalists, bloggers, political activists, religious leaders and others.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijani, jail, Journalist, Rauf Mirkadirov

AZERBAIJAN Leyla Yunus The activist released from jail

December 9, 2015 By administrator

arton119624-480x365Baku, December 9, 2015 (AFP) – The Azerbaijani Justice released from prison Wednesday rights activist Leyla Yunus Human, commuting his sentence of eight and a half years in prison, suspended sentence, said a journalist from AFP at the trial.

The Baku Court of Appeal sentenced the activist to five years suspended sentence, Ms. Yunus justifying the release from prison of the deterioration of his health. She was sentenced in August to eight and a half years in prison for “fraud” and “tax evasion”.

Her husband, Arif Yunus, was also sentenced to seven years in prison for the same reasons before being released in November because of his poor health. Since he pleaded for the release of his wife, according to his lawyers who suffers from liver necrosis.

Leyla Yunus, director of the Institute for Peace and Democracy, and her husband Arif, renowned political analyst, were arrested in the summer of 2014 for “treason” and “tax evasion” charges that spouses reject. Justice accuses including Leyla Yunus espionage in favor of Armenia and attempt to “propaganda for recognition Nagorno Karabakh regime,” a separatist region that are fighting for decades Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Incarcerated for over a year, she said “she was beaten in his detention center.” The Ministry of Justice had denied the accusations.

The NGOs defending human rights, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), had repeatedly called for the release of this woman who has been campaigning for several years to promote reconciliation between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The NGOs defending human rights regularly denounce the regime of President Ilham Aliyev, including any dispute as soon as it provokes a severe reaction from the authorities of that country’s oil-rich Caucasus.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, executes prisoners in secret jails (Video by RT), jail, Leyla Yunus, released

Terrorist State of #Turkey sentenced to jail pro-Kurdish MP over alleged PKK links

November 21, 2015 By administrator

f75fc0ed-1d5f-4ebc-a6d0-e60fbff498f7

This photo, provided by Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency, shows Turkish and pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) lawmaker Lezgin Botan (2nd-L).

A court in Turkey has sentenced a lawmaker from the country’s  pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) to more than six years in prison over alleged affiliation to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

On Friday, the 2nd High Penal Court in Turkey’s eastern province of Van handed down a six-year-and-three-month jail term to Lezgin Botan.

Jail terms with similar lengths were also given to former HDP legislator Selami Ozyasar and two members from a teachers’ union.

They were convicted of being members of the Group of Communities in Kurdistan (KCK), which is said to be linked to the PKK.

MPs on hunger strike

Meanwhile, four HDP lawmakers have gone on hunger strike in a show of protest against a curfew imposed in the southeastern city of Nusaybin, situated 792 kilometers (492 miles) east of the capital, Ankara.

Turkish security officials placed Nusaybin under curfew on November 13, and military operations continue against PKK fighters in the area.

There are reports that the power is out in some 70 percent of the neighborhoods in Nusaybin, and one third of the population is experiencing cuts in water supplies.

Turkey has been engaged in a large-scale military campaign against the PKK in its southern border region in the recent past. The Turkish military has also been conducting offensives against the positions of the PKK in northern Iraq.

The operations began in the wake of a deadly July 20 bombing in the southern Turkish town of Suruc, an ethnically Kurdish town located close to border with Syria. Over 30 people died in the Suruc attack, which the Turkish government blamed on Takfiri Daesh terrorists.

After the bombing in Suruc, the PKK militants, who accuse the government in Ankara of supporting Daesh, engaged in a series of supposedly reprisal attacks against Turkish police and security forces, in turn prompting the Turkish military operations.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: executes prisoners in secret jails (Video by RT), jail, MP, pro-kurdish, Turkey

International Federation of Journalists: general secretary: Turkey is largest jail for journalists in Europe

November 6, 2015 By administrator

Participants address a joint press conference at the Press Club in Brussels on Friday. (Photo: Cihan)

Participants address a joint press conference at the Press Club in Brussels on Friday. (Photo: Cihan)

Anthony Bellanger, the general secretary of the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), said at a press conference in Brussels on Friday that as a result of government pressure on free media, Turkey has become the largest jail for journalists in Europe.
Speaking during a joint press conference at the Press Club in Brussels along with representatives from the Journalists Union of Turkey (TGS),

Bellanger noted that they had been concerned about government pressure on the press in Turkey for some time and that it did not end after the Nov. 1 election.
Bellanger noted that Turkey leads Europe for the number of imprisoned journalists and that more complaints are submitted to the European Council about the conditions journalists in Turkey face than any other country. “Turkey is the largest jail for journalists in Europe,” he said.

“It [following the pressure on the media in Turkey] has become our daily routine work. We were concerned about the situation before Nov. 1 election and it continues after the election,” Bellanger said.
Underlining that the IFJ has taken steps to have the UN impose sanctions on countries that violate press freedoms, Bellanger noted that sanctions must not be understood as simply embargoes; there could also be economic sanctions through international financial institutions such as International Monetary Fund (IMF).

He added that the IFJ and the EFJ wrote a letter to President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in late September denouncing restrictions on the freedom of the press and increased censorship in Turkey.
The letter, signed by the heads of the IFJ and the EFJ, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), called for reforms after the Nov. 1 snap election to ensure that the profession of journalism in Turkey recover its position as a profession that is independent, pluralistic and in the service of the public interest.

“We wish to remind you that journalism’s central role in a democracy is to hold government to account by regularly and independently challenging it on its performance and records. A government that responds with hostility, public rebuke and prosecutions is a government that has given up on its own ability to win public support based on the legitimacy of its policies and record in office,” read the letter.
According to Bellanger, international press organizations, along with their Turkish partners, must work harder to protect the rights of journalists in Turkey.

‘Freedom of media in Turkey can be summarized with takeover of İpek media Group’

Also speaking during the press conference, TGS President Uğur Güç said that the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government pressure on free media has continued for years and media freedom in Turkey can be summarized with the takeover of the critical İpek Media Group by a government-backed court order just days before the Nov. 1 election.
On Oct. 28, Turkish police raided the headquarters of the media outlets that are part of Koza İpek Holding after the Ankara 5th Criminal Court of Peace ruled for the takeover of the administration of the holding’s companies in a government-backed move. Supported by riot police in gas masks, police officers and trustees appointed to manage the firms broke down the gate of the corporate headquarters of Koza İpek Holding, used pepper spray on lawyers who tried to protest and made their way into the building by force.
So far, the new trustees have fired 71 journalists from the outlets that make up the İpek Media Group.
TGS İstanbul branch head and reporter for the Evrensel daily Gökhan Durmuş said at the press conference that the pressure on the media in Turkey had brought journalists of different ideologies together to discuss freedom of the press.
“I saw Bülent Keneş, the editor-in-chief of Today’s Zaman, at TGS meetings and I believe this cooperation among journalists who are critical of the government will increase in Turkey because the government pressure on the media will continue to increase,” Durmuş said.
Keneş was briefly arrested in October over a series of tweets critical of the government and Erdoğan. He was accused of “insulting Erdoğan,” a charge that is often brought to punish criticism of the president. Keneş appears in court several times per month for several cases related to his critical tweets.

source: Zaman

Filed Under: News Tagged With: EFJ, IFJ, jail, Koza İpek Holding, media freedom, Turkey, turkish journalists

Terrorist State of Turkey: Two children face two years in jail for tearing down Erdoğan poster

October 28, 2015 By administrator

AFP photo

AFP photo

DİYARBAKIR

Two children aged 12 and 13 have been arrested on charges of “insulting the Turkish president” after allegedly tearing down posters showing a photo of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, news website Radikal has reported.

The two cousins, identified only by the initials R.Y. and R.T., now each face up to two years and four months in prison, upon approval of the case by the Justice Ministry.

R.Y. and R.T., two cousins, were detained on May. 1 for tearing down the posters outside the local highway directorate in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır.

In his testimony, R.Y. reportedly said the two were heading back home from the market and they wanted to remove the posters from the billboards in order to sell them to a junk dealer.

“We did not care about whose posters they were. We just wanted to remove them in order to sell them to a junk dealer,” R.Y. said.

The Diyarbakır Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office applied to the Justice Ministry to file a lawsuit against the two children, as Article 299 of the Turkish Criminal Code (TCK) states that filing a legal case on charges of “defaming the Turkish president” must be done upon approval from the Justice Ministry.

After approval from the ministry, the case was filed against the two cousins in the Diyarbakır 1st Children Court.

The prosecutor’s office also asked for implementation of Article 5 of the Child Protection Law, which means counselling the family of the children in question, assuring their school attendance, and assuring their health conditions.

The article also includes the settlement of children implicated in criminal activities in a children’s home after serving their time in a young offenders’ prison.

The first court hearing will be held on Dec. 8 this year, as the indictment prepared by the prosecutor’s office has been accepted by the Diyarbakır First Children’s Court.

The children’s lawyer, İsmail Korkmaz, said the charges of “insulting the Turkish president” were “unclear” and it was difficult for children to even know who the posters showed.

“It is devastating to see two children being tried for tearing down a poster of the president,” Korkmaz added, slamming Turkey’s “illiberal” justice system.

October/28/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: children, Erdogan, jail, Turkey

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