1. Introduction
1. On 15 July 2016, Turkey suffered
a failed
coup d’état, after
a group within the Turkish armed forces attempted to overthrow the
democratic institutions and abolish the constitutional order with
force and violence, which left 248 dead and more than 2 000 wounded.
The authorities immediately affirmed that members of the movement
led by Fethullah Gülen,
which was labelled a terrorist
organisation in 2014 (thus known as “FETÖ/PDY”, i.e. the “Fethullahist
Terrorist Organisation”/”Parallel State Structure”), were behind
the failed coup, in an attempt to take over the democratic institutions
and destroy the constitutional order in Turkey – which was denied
by Fethullah Gülen. There was, however, widespread consensus that
the movement had been infiltrating notably the judiciary and the
police, and other State institutions, for more than 40 years. The influence
of the Gülen movement in State institutions was already raised in
the 2013 post-monitoring report presented by the Parliamentary Assembly
rapporteur Ms Josette Durrieu (France, SOC), but was at that time dismissed
by the authorities.
In the meantime, the European Commission
for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) has provided factual
information about the movement, and the involvement of some members
of this movement in certain illegal acts in order to gain influence,
those acts allegedly consisting of “manipulations of the entry exams
to various State institutions, collection of a
de facto compulsory ‘taxes’, under
the guise of benevolent donations supposed to finance the charity
projects of the Gülenist network, fabrication of incriminating evidence
against political opponents”, such as in the so-called Ergenekon
and Balyoz trials, “in which a large number of persons were convicted
on the basis of at least partially fabricated evidence”.
2. The Council of Europe was among the first organisations to
condemn this attempt to overthrow an elected government: Assembly
President Pedro Agramunt, Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland and
Estonian Minister of Foreign Affairs Marina Kaljurand, in her capacity
as Chair of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe,
condemned the coup on behalf of the organisation and paid visits
to the country in the weeks that followed the failed coup,
to
show the solidarity of the European people with Turkey. Since then, delegations
of the Parliamentary Assembly, the Congress of Local and Regional
Authorities of the Council of Europe, the Committee for the Prevention
of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT)
and the Venice Commission, as well as the Council of Europe Commissioner
for Human Rights, have also visited the country and continue to
closely follow the situation in Turkey, and the compatibility of
the post-coup measures with Council of Europe norms.
3. The failed coup d’état prompted
the authorities to declare a state of emergency and launch a vast process
to “cleanse” the State institutions from members seen as being loyal
to the Gülen movement.
4. While, according to the Venice Commission,
there was no doubt that the Turkish authorities
were confronted “with a dangerous armed conspiracy”, and that they
had “good reasons to declare a state of emergency and give extraordinary
powers to the government”, the consequences of the state of emergency on
human rights protection and the scale of the purge raises serious
questions. Even though Turkey may take measures derogating from
its obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS
No. 5) (Article 15), a state of emergency regime is not a carte
blanche for the authorities – and should “remain within the limits
set by the Constitution and domestic and international obligations
of the State”.
5. The Monitoring Committee followed the post-coup developments
in the framework of the post-monitoring dialogue which has been
in place since 2004. At all of its subsequent meetings, the committee
held exchanges of views on the situation in Turkey, in particular
the consequences of the state of emergency and the subsequent decree
laws. On 9 November 2016, the committee adopted a declaration expressing
its serious concern after the arrest of 12 members of parliament,
the implementation of the state of emergency, “notably the continuous
and massive dismissal of civil servants and members of the judiciary
and the consequences of the measures contained in the decree laws
on fundamental freedoms and fair trials, which will result in numerous
complaints being lodged with the European Court of Human Rights,
should Turkey fail to redress these shortcomings and ensure effective
legal remedies”, as well as the arrests of leading journalists from
Cumhuriyet – for their alleged support
to the PKK and the Gülen movement –, the recent closure of Kurdish media
and the restrictions imposed on the autonomy of the universities;
the committee also expressed its dismay over the renewed discussions
about the reintroduction of the death penalty in Turkey, which,
it stressed, is incompatible with membership of the Council of Europe.
6. Expressing increased concern about the consequences of the
failed coup d’état, the Monitoring Committee,
meeting on 14 December 2016, decided to request the holding of a
debate under urgent procedure on the functioning of democratic institutions
and asked us, as the committee’s co-rapporteurs on Turkey, to visit the
country.
7. Our fact-finding visit was carried out in Istanbul and Ankara
from 9 to 13 January 2017. We met the Vice-President of the Grand
National Assembly, the Minister of Education, the Deputy Ministers
of Foreign Affairs and Justice, representatives of the Ministry
of Internal Affairs, the Turkish delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly,
members of the political groups represented in parliament, the President
of the parliament’s Justice Committee, the Ombudsman, representatives
of trade unions, the diplomatic community, representatives of the
media and non-governmental organisations (NGOs), academics and local
authorities. We would like to thank the Turkish delegation and the
Turkish authorities for the organisation of the visit, which took
place in the midst of the vote on the constitutional amendments.
Unfortunately, we were unable to meet the President of the Republic,
the Prime Minister, the Chairperson of the parliamentary Constitutional
Committee and the Vice-President of the High Council for Judges
and Prosecutors.
8. By letter dated 23 February 2017, the Chairperson of the Turkish
delegation, Mr Talip Küçükcan, provided us with additional, updated
information on the latest developments, which we have taken into
account in the preparation of this report. We would like to thank
him for this information.
9. In addition to the activities of the Monitoring Committee,
a cross-party ad hoc sub-committee of the Committee on Political
Affairs and Democracy, chaired by Mogens Jensen (Denmark, SOC),
was
invited to the country and submitted an information note following
its visit on 21 and 22 November 2016, which has provided excellent
background information and valuable recommendations from which we
drew inspiration.
The conclusions of the ad hoc sub-committee,
which were endorsed by the Political Affairs Committee on 15 December
2016, found it “necessary that the Assembly decides to reopen the
monitoring procedure for Turkey, currently subject to a post-monitoring
dialogue” (paragraph 115). It also shared the view, that we fully support,
that “challenging the credentials of the Turkish parliamentary delegation
would not only be erroneous but also counterproductive. It would
target majority and opposition members from the Turkish Parliament
alike, harm the dialogue that has been engaged and could lead to
distancing the country from the Organisation” (paragraph115). As
a consequence, the Political Affairs Committee also requested an
urgent debate on the functioning of democratic institutions in Turkey
during the January 2017 part-session.
10. On 23 January 2017, the request for an urgent debate on the
situation in Turkey, which was tabled by both the Political Affairs
and Monitoring Committees, was turned down by the Bureau of the
Assembly, and failed to reach a two-thirds majority in the Assembly
chamber, despite the support of nearly 60% of the Assembly members
who voted. The following day, the Political Affairs Committee adopted
a declaration on the situation in Turkey and recent developments.
For its part, on 26 January 2017, the Monitoring
Committee deplored the Assembly’s decision not to hold an urgent
debate and requested that a debate on “The functioning of democratic
institutions in Turkey” be held during the April 2017 part-session
to “allow the Assembly to debate recent developments in the country,
continue the dialogue and prompt Turkey, one of the oldest Council
of Europe member States and among the first signatories of the European
Convention on Human Rights, to comply with its obligations towards
the Council of Europe and enhance its democratic stability and security”.
2. Political background
2.1. General
considerations
11. Turkey continues to face adverse
geopolitical conditions. It is engaged in military operations on
the ground in northern Syria to combat Daesh and contain the Kurdish
organisations in Syria which are perceived as a threat to its national
security. It is today involved in the military operations to free
the Iraqi city of Mossoul from the control of Daesh. Turkey has
sponsored, together with the Russian Federation and Iran, the launch of
a round of peace talks in Astana. In the wake of the ongoing conflict
in Syria since 2011, Turkey is hosting nearly 3 million refugees.
The Assembly has continuously praised the efforts and resources
invested in the accommodation of the refugees, which forms the core
of an agreement reached with the European Union and ongoing negotiations
to obtain a visa-free regime for Turkish citizens.
12. Turkey is facing multiple terrorist threats and attacks perpetrated
by the “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant” (ISIL/Daesh), the
“Kurdistan Workers' Party” (PKK)
and
the PKK-affiliated “Kurdistan Freedom Hawks” (TAK), which have,
again recently, carried out terrorist attacks. Below are listed
just a few of the most recent attacks:
- a bomb attack on 10 December 2016 outside Beşiktaş’s Vodafone
Arena Stadium killed 46, including 37 police officers, and wounded
150. TAK claimed responsibility;
- on 17 December 2016, a car bomb by the PKK killed at least
13 soldiers and wounded 56 when it ripped through a bus carrying
off-duty soldiers in the central city of Kayseri;
- the Reina nightclub in Istanbul was attacked on 1 January
2017 by ISIL (39 victims);
- a car bomb attack, for which TAK later claimed responsibility,
targeted the İzmir courthouse and killed two people on 5 January
2017.
13. In this respect, during our visit to the country, we acknowledged
the extent of the terrorist threats and attacks faced by Turkey,
and we acknowledged
the price paid by the Turkish citizens who opposed the coup plotters
in Istanbul, Ankara and other cities. Unfortunately, the terrorist
threats, combined with an uncertain political environment, have
had a negative impact on the economy, and tourism in particular,
and have started to have a dramatic effect on the domestic economic
situation, with the Turkish lira plunging.
14. We stressed that it is the right and duty of the Turkish State
to fight against terrorism in all its forms. At the same time, the
fight against terrorism can only be effective if fought within the
framework of the rule of law and respect for the values upheld by
the Council of Europe.
15. In the light of the developments that occurred in 2015/2016,
especially after the disruption of the discussion on the resolution
of the Kurdish issue and the crackdown on the media and the judiciary,
the Assembly decided to hold a debate on the functioning of democratic
institutions. In its
Resolution
2121 (2016) adopted on 22 June 2016, i.e. three weeks before the
failed coup, the Assembly concluded that the erosion of the rule
of law, infringements of freedom of the media and of expression
and human rights violations in relation to the anti-terrorism security
operations in south-east Turkey “constituted a threat to the functioning
of democratic institutions of the country and its commitments to
its obligations towards the Council of Europe”.
16. At the same time, the Assembly has on numerous occasions recalled
that Turkey is a strategic partner for the Council of Europe, and
repeatedly called for a constructive dialogue with Turkey. We are
convinced that in these challenging times, reinforced co-operation
with Turkey is needed to uphold fundamental freedoms, the rule of
law and democracy. At this moment in time, the Council of Europe,
and in particular our Assembly, need and want to engage further
with Turkey.
2.2. Turkey’s
failed coup d’état of 15 July 2016
17. On 15 July 2016, a group within
the Turkish Armed Forces attempted to overthrow the democratic institutions
and abolish the constitutional order with force and violence. According
to the General Staff of the Army, 8 651 military personnel were
involved and 35 planes including fighter jets of the Turkish armed
forces, 37 helicopters, 246 armoured vehicles including 74 tanks
and approximately 4 000 light weapons were used.
This group issued a
declaration on behalf of the “Peace at Home Council” on the Turkish
Radio and Television (TRT). During this coup, a number of State
institutions were targeted by planes and bombs (including the Turkish
Parliament, the Presidential Palace, the Ankara Security Directorate,
the Police Special Operation Forces of the General Directorate of
Security and the National Intelligence Agency).
18. President Erdoğan escaped an assassination attempt at his
hotel in Marmaris. He addressed the Turkish people by videophone
on the private channel CNN Türk that night, calling on them to take
to the streets and oppose the coup. Thousands of people demonstrated
and confronted the plotters. The coup subsequently failed in the
early hours of 16 July 2016. It left 248 people dead and 2 200 injured,
causing a great trauma in society. It was unanimously condemned
by all political parties and civil organisations, as well as by
the international community.
On 7 August 2016, President
Erdoğan organised a meeting in Yenikapı with Prime Minister Binali
Yıldırım, Chair of the Justice and Development Party (AKP), Mr Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu,
leader of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) and Mr Devlet Bahceli,
leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). The leader of the
Democratic Peoples’ Party (HDP), Mr Selahattin Demirtas, was not
invited to this meeting. On 9 August 2016, millions of Turks demonstrated
to express their commitment to democracy.
19. The authorities have since asked for the extradition of Fethullah Gülen
from the
United States, which has requested evidence regarding his direct
involvement in the coup attempt. On 13 September 2016, Turkey sent
a first temporary arrest request against Fethullah Gülen.
20. In the wake of the failed
coup
d’état, the debate about the reintroduction of the death
penalty resurfaced. The President of the Republic indicated that
he would promulgate the reintroduction of the death penalty, if
the parliament would agree to adopt such a law. For the time being,
no such bill has been introduced or debated, but the Monitoring
Committee, and later the sub-committee of the Political Affairs
Committee, already expressed a clear stance on that issue: the death
penalty is completely incompatible with membership of the Council
of Europe.
21. This coup attempt, which the President of the Republic considered
to be a “gift of God”, was followed by a massive purge not only
in the public administration, but also in the private sector. During
our visit to Turkey, we were also puzzled to hear strong rhetoric
in official statements referring to “a country under occupation”, which
should be “liberated” and required a “second war of independence”.
This confirmed the overall atmosphere in a country which is going
through a profound transitional phase, questioning its past and reshaping
its future, and profiling the birth of a new Republic which should
culminate in 2023.
22. During our visit, we could clearly see how traumatic the coup
has been for Turkish citizens. Everyone we met condemned the coup,
and was supportive of any move to bring the perpetrators and those
directly and actively involved to justice. However, some of those
we met were also traumatised by the counter-coup measures, which
have created legal uncertainty and fostered an atmosphere of fear.
In particular NGO and media representatives, who are in the forefront
of the protection of the fundamental rights of citizens and vulnerable
persons, were affected by this atmosphere.
3. Implementation
of the state of emergency
3.1. Consequences
of the state of emergency and the subsequent decree laws
23. On 20 July 2016, President
Erdoğan announced that Turkey would declare a three-month state
of emergency under Article 120 of the Constitution.
On 21 July 2016, the Turkish authorities
notified the Secretary General of the Council of Europe of its derogation
from the European Convention on Human Rights under the Convention’s
Article 15.
The Turkish authorities
have since provided regular information about the implementation
of the state of emergency and prolonged the state of emergency on
11 October 2016 and 19 January 2017 for two additional periods of
90 days.
24. In the framework of the state of emergency, 21 “Decrees with
Force of Law” (“Kanun Hükmünde Kararname”, KHK, hereafter “decree
laws”) were published. The Constitution requires that decree laws
be approved by the parliament within 30 days following their publication.
To date, only five decree laws (Nos. 667, 668, 669, 671 and 674)
have been approved by the parliament. Two of them (Nos. 686 and
687) are on the agenda of the relevant committee and the remaining
14 are on the agenda of the general assembly of the parliament,
which raises serious concerns about: 1) the compliance of the decree
laws with the Constitution; and 2) the effective role of the parliament
in discussing and approving the emergency decree laws.
25. The decree laws notably regulated:
- the dismissal of civil servants,
members of the judiciary, members of the
public service, the Turkish armed forces , the Coast Guard
Command organisation and the Turkish National Police. Their names appeared
in the lists appended to the decree laws, for being “considered
to be a member of, affiliated with or have cohesion or connection
with terrorist organisations or structures, organisations or groups
which are established by the National Security Council as engaging
in activities against the national security of the State”. Those
dismissed from office will not be employed again. They will not, directly
or indirectly, be assigned to a public service. Their gun licences
were revoked and their passports cancelled;
- the closure of private health institutions and organisations,
private education institutions and organisations as well as private
dormitories and lodgings for students, foundations and associations
and their commercial enterprises, foundation-run higher education
institutions, unions, federations and confederations on the ground
that “they belong to, are connected or are in communication with
the Fethullah Terrorist Organisation (FETÖ/Parallel State Structure)”. All movables,
real estate assets, receivables and rights, and all documents and
papers of foundations closed down were seized and transferred to
the General Directorate of Foundations;
- the closure of private radio stations and television channels,
newspapers and periodicals;
- the appointment of university rectors by the President
of the Republic, for a maximum of two terms at the same university,
from three candidates proposed by Turkey’s Higher Education Board
(YÖK). The President will also be able to appoint a rector directly
if he does not select one of those presented by the YÖK within a
month and the body does not present a new candidate.
26. A recent development was the publication of four decree laws
on 6 January 2017, which resulted in the dismissal of 8 398 more
public employees and 649 academics and the banning of 83 more civil
society organisations. These decree laws also provide that citizens
living abroad with court cases pending or under prosecution, who
fail to return to Turkey within three months of the publication
of their name in the Official Gazette by
the Minister of Justice at the request of the prosecutor, could
be deprived of their citizenship – which would result in statelessness,
in blatant violation of international treaties.
27. On 7 February 2017, with the publication of decree law No.
686, about 4 500 civil servants were dismissed, among them nearly
330 academics, according to the list established by the YÖK, and 2 600 members
of the Ministry of National Education.
28. On 8 February 2017, the publication of Decree Law No. 687
stripped the Supreme Election Board (YSK/SBE) of the right to impose
penalties or broadcasting bans on broadcasting companies not complying
with fair media coverage regulations during election campaigns,
or not complying with the regulations concerning the ban on publishing
opinion polls ten days prior to the date of the referendum. The
decree law also provided for a change in the law on basic provisions
of elections, allowing limitless advertising on private television
stations during elections and referendums. This is a clear regression
compared to the rules in force so far, which were already depicted
as problematic in previous election observation reports.
Balanced
access of supporters and opponents to public media broadcasting
should thus be examined, as it is a precondition for guaranteeing
the freedom of voters to form an opinion.
3.2. Issues
raised by emergency decree laws vis-à-vis Turkey’s obligations towards
the Council of Europe
29. While the Turkish authorities
had legitimate reasons to declare a state of emergency and to derogate from
the European Convention on Human Rights in July 2016, we observed
that the state of emergency has had a huge impact on many segments
of society, far beyond the expected impact on alleged “FETÖ/PDY” members.
The Turkish authorities assert that the scope of the decree laws
issued has been “limited to the terrorist organisations in order
not to interfere with the rights and freedoms of others”.
This,
however, is contradicted by the Venice Commission,
and by our own findings during our
visit to Turkey: the various representatives from civil society
or from the media whom we met confirmed that the state of emergency
was indeed being used in a way that “went beyond what is permitted
by the Turkish Constitution and by international law”,
as
noted by the Venice Commission.
30. We have tried to sum up the main issues raised by the decree
laws vis-à-vis Turkey’s obligations towards the Council of Europe.
It is also important to recall that, even under a state of emergency,
the European Convention on Human Rights continues to apply in Turkey
and any measures taken under the state of emergency must comply
with it. Even in the case of a derogation from Article 15 of the
Convention, the European Court of Human Rights remains competent
to decide whether the criterion of proportionality of the measures
taken has been respected in the individual cases against Turkey
that will come before it.
3.2.1. Extent
of the measures taken, lack of proportionality
31. The post-coup measures, the
state of emergency and the emergency decree laws have resulted in unprecedented
mass dismissals, investigations, arrests, and closures of media
and institutions. The figures mentioned by official authorities
and our interlocutors speak for themselves on the extent of the
measures taken:
- 150 000 people
were dismissed, including approximately 96 000 as a direct
consequence of the publication of their name on an appendix to the
decree laws;
- 100 000 people are facing investigations, of which 44 000
are imprisoned pending trial;
- 3 994 judicial professionals were suspended, while 3 659
were dismissed by state of emergency decrees, including
173 judges from the high courts and five members of the High Council
of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK);
- 177 media outlets were shut down, including a large number
of pro-Kurdish media, but also Kemalist or left-wing media. Internet
access restrictions have increased;
- more than 150 journalists are reportedly detained, this includes the
editor-in-chief of the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet,
Murat Sabuncu, and the Chairperson and executive members of the Cumhuriyet
Foundation, all accused of “committing crimes on behalf of ‘FETÖ’
and the outlawed PKK without being a member” aiming to “conceal
the truth with manipulation and publish stories that aimed to make
Turkey ungovernable”;
- 2 500 journalists have lost their jobs since 15 July 2016
and many more apply self-censorship in order to protect themselves;
- approximately 2 100 schools, dormitories and universities
have been shut down;
- approximately 1 800 associations and foundations have
been shut down, including 370 civil society organisations, of which
199 represent Kurdish civil society, accused of alleged links to
“terrorism” on 11 November 2016. All movables, real estate assets,
receivables and rights, and all documents and papers of foundations
closed down were seized and transferred to the General Directorate
of Foundations;
- YARSAV, the Turkish independent association of judges
and prosecutors – which was functioning as an ONG and is a member
of the International Association of Judges (IAJ) and the European
Association of Judges (EAJ) – was dissolved and many of its leaders
were arrested, including Mr Murat Arslan, its President.
32. In a recent communication, the Turkish authorities argued
that with the existing domestic remedies, to date, over 300 institutions
had been reopened (including 182 associations, 18 foundations, 92
private education institutions, five radio-TV channels, 17 newspapers
and one private health institution) and more than 31 000 public
employees reinstated.
33. We were shocked to learn about the consequences of these decree
laws in practice. We looked at the situation in the education sector,
which was massively affected by the dismissals. We had meetings
with various trade unions – covering a wide political spectrum –
and the Minister of Education. We learnt that 30 000 teachers had
been dismissed (they were 33 065 one month later
), as well as 6 000 academics or
university staff members. In addition, 50 000 teachers and staff
members had been suspended, many of them for at least three months.
The work permits of 20 000 teachers in the special private education
service had been cancelled by the Ministry of Education.
34. It was also noted that several academics who had been dismissed
had obviously nothing to do with the failed coup – but they had
signed the Peace Declaration
in 2015, which was
sufficient to qualify them to be considered as guilty. In February
2017, 184 of the 330 dismissed academics had signed the Peace Declaration. In
total, 312 academics who signed the Declaration were dismissed by
decree laws as of 15 February 2017.
Some teachers were also forced to
quit their jobs; this was the case for 140 of them in Batman after
a trustee was appointed to the municipality.
35. All the trade union representatives backed in principle the
measures undertaken to prosecute and arrest the coup plotters, especially
within the security police and the military. However, they all found
it difficult to believe that hundreds of thousands of people, including
thousands of teachers and doctors, were involved in a coup d’état.
36. The state of emergency also had an impact on trade union activities,
which were already under pressure before the coup. The trade union
KESK recalled that they had lost 28 of their members in the 10 October
2015 bomb attack in Ankara, but later faced prosecution for organising
demonstrations. They felt that the state of emergency had increased
the pressure on trade unions, with the dismissals and suspensions
of their members based on “biased, arbitrary lists lacking legal
grounds”: in the wake of the failed coup, 11 807 members and managers
of the trade unions we met had been suspended from their jobs, while
2 179 members had been dismissed through decree laws and disciplinary
procedures. Strong suspicions were expressed that these dismissals
and suspensions were not related to the coup, but purely to trade
union activities. They considered that decree laws were being used
as a means to suppress the job security of public employees. The government
was constantly restricting the fundamental freedoms needed to carry
out trade union activities. Trade union representatives were all
in favour of further investigations to uncover those involved in
the coup, but they called for the state of emergency to be lifted
to enhance job security.
37. Given the high percentage of women working in the education
and health sectors, we can assume that the state of emergency has
had a disproportionate impact on women. We were also told that many
associations and foundations which were dealing with gender issues
(such as violence against women or reproductive health) but also
municipal services in the HDP municipalities now under trusteeship,
had been closed down – preventing women’s access to the services
previously provided. Our attention was also drawn to the fact that the
failed coup had nurtured a male chauvinist mentality, which was
now operating unimpeded. This, according to women’s associations,
had resulted in an increase in violence against women, in particular
in public places such as buses, where there had been an increase
of attacks on women, and even rapes, in recent months.
38. Concern about the scale and extent of the purges conducted
in the public administration and the judiciary, and many other public
institutions, targeting alleged members of the Gülen movement was
also reflected in the December 2016 opinion of the Venice Commission.
The Assembly had, in its
Resolution
2121 (2016), noted that the Gülen movement, a former ally of the
ruling party operating legally – for more than 40 years – until
2014, was later considered a terrorist organisation. While civil
servants have an obligation to be loyal vis-à-vis the State and
not to take instructions from external sources, it is the duty of
the State to clarify to all public servants when a so far well-established
organisation is subsequently considered as a “threat to national
security” – and becomes thus incompatible with public service –
to avoid lack of information and clarity which could lead to “unjust
dismissals which may be seen as retroactive punishment”, according
to the Venice Commission.
39. Last but not least, we were concerned about the impact of
this massive purge on the school and university systems, on pupils
and students, whose right to education is protected by the Additional
Protocol (Article 2) to the European Convention on Human Rights.
The suspension and dismissal of thousands of teachers and academics,
the closure of schools in Turkey and abroad, and the disruption
of work in faculties could result in serious challenges, ranging
from the transfer of students to the recognition of their past studies and
qualifications or the validity of qualifications obtained in institutions
which have since closed. We expect that due consideration will be
paid to these issues, in order not to stigmatise or impede the future
of this generation of students. Likewise, we are concerned by the
move made by the Turkish authorities, with the assistance of the
newly established Maarif Foundation,
to incite foreign countries to close
down Gülen-linked schools and institutions, and by reported cases
of religious authorities allegedly spying on the Turkish community
living abroad or inciting Turks to denounce alleged members of the
Gülen movement.
3.2.2. Lack
of procedural guarantees: access to lawyers, detention
40. The decree laws introduced
a number of measures and practices which raise many concerns from
the point of view of their compatibility with Council of Europe
standards.
41. The dismissals lack due prior notification. In our discussions,
it was repeatedly mentioned that those dismissed by decree law had
received no prior notification – just discovered that their names
were on a list. In addition, they did not know why or on what evidence
they had been dismissed, and did not have access to their file.
As pointed out by the Venice Commission, “the public servants concerned
should have been able, at least, to know the evidence adduced against
them and be allowed to comment on that evidence before any decision on
dismissal was taken”.
42. As already pointed out by the Commissioner for Human Rights,
the Venice Commission, and the ad hoc sub-committee of the Political
Affairs Committee, the concept of “connections” to the Gülen movement
has been too “loosely defined and did not require a meaningful connection
with such organisations” which may reasonably cast doubt on the
loyalty of civil servants.
In concreto,
when we enquired about the evidence needed to identify a “Gülenist”,
we were told that at least two criteria had to be fulfilled. We
failed to obtain the list of criteria, but some of the criteria
which were often mentioned included the use of the Bylock encrypted messenger
service,
financial transactions
operated in the Bank Asya since 2014, attendance in private schools
belonging to the Gülen movement or confessions made by members of
the movement. Reference was also made to exam questions being stolen
and commercial solidarity among members of the movement.
43. The decree laws have also reduced the rights of the defence:
until 23 January 2017, persons in police custody could not be seen
by a judge for up to 30 days; access by detainees to a lawyer could
be restricted for up to five days, and there were also restrictions
on the right to a lawyer of their own choice or their right to confidential
conversations with their lawyers. In addition to these legal hurdles,
we were informed that lawyers also face a series of practical obstacles
when visiting their clients, such as restricted visiting hours,
or the obligation to make an appointment with their client. While
it is obvious that the scale of the arrests and detentions have
put an extra burden on the police and the justice system which have
limited logistical capacities, this should not be at the expense
of the most basic rights of the defence, such as access to a lawyer. International
human rights associations also pointed out that a prolonged custody
period without access to a judge or a lawyer is likely to increase
the risk of being subjected to torture and ill-treatment.
Further
detailed concerns about restricted access to lawyers in Turkey under
the state of emergency are listed in the excellent Assembly report
on “Securing access of detainees to lawyers”.
44. It is beyond any doubt that these restrictions to the rights
of the defence will be challenged in domestic courts (which are
yet to be defined) and before the European Court of Human Rights.
By the end of 2016, 50 000 individual applications were pending
before the Constitutional Court.
45. On 23 January 2017, the first day of the Assembly’s part-session,
the Turkish authorities published four new decree laws which contained
two important provisions regarding procedural guarantees: the right
of a suspect in police custody to have access to a lawyer could
no longer be restricted during five days; and the time during which
suspects could be held in police custody was reduced from up to
30 days to seven days, although the Public Prosecutor could extend
this period by a further seven days in specific circumstances.
46. These provisions are undoubtedly a positive move. It will
remain in the remit of the European Court of Human Rights, if cases
arise, to decide whether the seven-day period is necessary and proportionate
under the current state of emergency.
3.2.3. Lack
of effective remedies: creation of an administrative commission
in 2017
47. We heard many testimonies from
people who, having been dismissed, felt powerless and unable to
seek redress from the justice system: the decisions taken on the
basis of decree laws cannot be challenged in a court and, moreover,
the European Court of Human Rights has, for the time being, declared
these complaints inadmissible, for the very reason that “[t]he fact
that the Constitutional Court had pronounced itself on the constitutionality
of a law in the context of a review of constitutionality
in abstracto did not prevent the
individuals from filing an individual petition before it to challenge
the individual measures taken in implementation of this law”.
In reality,
those individuals dismissed by decree laws, or legal entities liquidated
by decree laws, are trapped in a legal limbo.
48. A working group comprising senior officials from the Ministry
of Justice and the Council of Europe was set up in September 2016
to examine issues that could potentially lead to violations of the
Convention. We welcome this initiative and the ongoing dialogue
between the Turkish authorities and the Secretary General of the
Council of Europe, and expect concrete results. The issue of the
absence of judicial review was raised in this context, and the Secretary
General suggested establishing an ad hoc body to find a legal solution.
49. The Venice Commission also expressed its concern about this
issue, and advised that “if, for practical reasons, the re-introduction
of full access to court for public servants is impossible in the
current conditions, the Turkish authorities should consider alternative
legal mechanisms, which might permit individual treatment of all
cases and ultimately give those dismissed their ‘day in court’,
thereby supporting the proposal made by the Secretary General of
the Council of Europe concerning the creation of an independent
ad hoc body for the examination of individual cases of dismissals,
subject to subsequent judicial review”.
50. Access to effective remedies is of utmost importance: it has
been shown that the dismissal of public servants was not based on
individual reasoning.
We were also told that the criteria
used are imprecise and subject to the assessment of individuals.
In certain cases, this process was perceived as a way of removing undesirable
colleagues. We questioned in detail several officials who had been
entrusted with identifying the Gülenists in their departments, submit
names to a committee and then to their respective ministries. We
drew their attention to the fact that their decision would have
a dramatic impact on people’s lives. Those involved in this “selection
process” were all convinced that remedies existed and could be activated
if mistakes had been made. We understood that, in practice, the
percentage of those reinstated was low: since August 2016, they amounted
to less than 400 of the 96 000 civil servants dismissed.
51. We were eager to learn more about the expected effective remedies
to be provided by the Turkish justice system. Unfortunately, we
could see no progress since the visit of the sub-committee chaired
by Mr Jensen; it still remained unclear “whether even the Constitutional
Court will have the power to thoroughly review the constitutionality
of the emergency decree laws, in particular on the basis of individual
applications brought before it”. As explained by Mr Jensen, “the
fact that the Constitutional Court has rejected a review of the emergency
decree laws in abstracto,
following applications filed by opposition MPs (prior to their approval
by parliament), did not exclude this Court’s competence to decide
on individual petitions brought by individuals affected by the emergency
decree laws in concreto (before
or after their approval by parliament), a competence that, for the
Venice Commission, the Constitutional Court did have”. We do not
need to recall in detail here the important role that the Constitutional
Court has played in safeguarding human rights in Turkey since the
right of individual petition to this Court for violations of human
rights was introduced.
52. On 23 January 2017, with the publication of Decree Law No.
685, the Turkish authorities decided to set up a national administrative
commission (“Inquiry Commission on State of Emergency Measures”)
to ensure an effective national judicial remedy for individuals
challenging measures taken under the decree laws. The commission
will be competent to review, in particular, the dismissals of civil
servants and studentships, the closure of associations, foundations,
trade unions, federations, confederations, private health institutions, private
education institutions, higher education foundations, private radio
stations and television channels, newspapers and reviews, news agencies,
publication and distribution channels outlets, and the annulment
of the ranks of retired staff.
53. As a result, individuals who were dismissed through an administrative
decision based on the decree laws can lodge an application to ordinary
courts. An individual dismissed by virtue of an appendix to the
decree laws can apply to the Inquiry Commission on State of Emergency
Measures, the decisions of which are subject to judicial review
and can be challenged before the relevant courts.
54. We were informed that the commission would be composed of
seven members (public officials, judges and prosecutors): three
to be appointed by the Prime Minister; one by the Minister of Justice;
one by the Minister of the Interior; and two by the High Council
of Judges and Prosecutors. It would be entitled to take binding
decisions, such as on the reinstatement of dismissed civil servants.
If it adopts a decision in favour of a institution that has been
closed down, all the effects of this closure will be considered
null and void.
55. The decisions of the national commission will be subject to
judicial review by the competent administrative courts whose decisions
may be further challenged before the Constitutional Court and, as
a last resort, before the European Court of Human Rights, which
will then decide whether the remedy is effective or not.
56. The members were to be appointed within one month, to begin
their work within six months at the latest. The commission will
be established for a two-year term, but this can be extended, if
necessary, for one year renewable. To date, however, the commission
has not yet been formed.
57. The setting up of the Inquiry Commission on State of Emergency
Measures is a welcome decision, which paves the way for judicial
review, and puts an end to the judicial limbo faced so far by dismissed
persons. We have heard a number of criticisms from opposition parties
related to the appointment of the members of this commission and
serious doubts about the capacity of such a structure to handle
thousands of cases in a reasonable time. In this respect, we share
the view expressed by the Political Affairs Committee on 24 January 2017,
for which “these measures seem to be in line with recommendations
by the Secretary General of the Organisation, which were backed
by the
ad hoc sub-committee,
and could be considered as a step in the right direction
provided that the decisions by the new administrative
commission are taken rapidly, independently and transparently”
(our emphasis).
We also note, along with Vice-President of the European Court of
Human Rights and Turkish judge Prof Işıl Karakaş, that this commission
is an administrative, not a judicial body.
58. The efficiency of the national administrative commission will
however be closely scrutinised, and we trust that further co-operation
with the Council of Europe on the remaining contentious issues will
redress the adverse consequences of measures which are obviously
not compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights and
the case law of the European Court of Human Rights. If not addressed,
these deficiencies will ultimately result in tens of thousands of
applications being lodged with the Court, which already experienced
a drastic increase of applications from Turkey in 2016:
already
16 000 applications have been registered by the Court, which, for
the time being, rejected some of them, urging the applicants to
exhaust domestic remedies.
3.2.4. Allegations
of torture
59. After the failed coup, a number
of allegations of torture and ill-treatment were raised by international
and local human rights associations, such as the Human Rights Association
of Turkey
and Amnesty International.
The opposition party CHP
collected 37 000 complaints about
unfair treatment.
It was surprising, if not shocking,
to read that Mehmet Metiner, AKP Deputy and Chair of the parliamentary
Sub-Committee on Prisons, declared on 13 October 2016 that the sub-committee
would not visit those arrested for “being a member of the ‘Fethullahist
Terrorist Organisation (FETÖ)’” and not carry out any investigation
into the torture and maltreatment claims.
60. In the light of these allegations, the CPT carried out an
ad hoc visit to Turkey from 29 August to 6 September 2016 to examine
the treatment and conditions of detention of persons who were detained
in connection with the recent attempted military coup. The report
was submitted to the authorities in November 2016. We hope, and
expect, the Turkish authorities to authorise the swift publication
of the CPT report, in line with a so far well-established practice.
We note, however, that the three past CPT reports prepared in 2015 and
2016 have not yet been published.
61. The Venice Commission also drew attention to “the evident
fact that measures adopted following the coup remove crucial safeguards
that protect detainees from abuse, and hence increase the likelihood
of ill-treatment and torture”. It underscored that the prohibition
on torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
is a non-derogable human rights obligation under both the ECHR and
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
It concluded that “no emergency situation may justify such abuse”.
62. We raised this issue with the authorities, who dismissed any
allegations of torture. They argued that whenever there are such
allegations, investigations are launched. We took good note that
the authorities reaffirmed the “zero-tolerance” approach and had
recently taken new initiatives.
However,
the credible reports produced by NGOs, and the restricted access
of detainees to their lawyers, their families or international delegations
is another source of concern. The adoption of the 2016 law on the
legal protection of security forces involved in fights against terrorist
organisations, which the Assembly opposed in its
Resolution 2121 (2016), is also a worrying development and could encourage
impunity of law-enforcement agents carrying out security operations:
in case of alleged wrongdoing, the opening of a prosecution would
require authorisation by the Minister of Justice.
3.2.5. Confiscation
of assets
63. According to the decree laws,
the assets of the dismissed persons or liquidated entities are seized
and transferred to the Savings Deposit Insurance Fund (TMSF), which
appoints trustees and board members to run the business. At the
time of our visit, the assets of 800 companies had been transferred
to the TMSF; their book value was estimated at 30 billion lira (approximately
8 billion euros at the time of our visit), while their debts were
estimated at 5 billion lira. The companies seized (managed) by TMSF
employ 20 000 persons, 14 000 of them belonging to a single holding.
The Chairperson of the TMSF emphasised that all measures were taken in
full compliance with the rule of law, and with due respect for property
rights, which remained untouched when assets were transferred. If
there was a ruling in a criminal case, the property would be confiscated.
He said that the companies would not be sold unless the company
liabilities surpassed its assets: in such cases, the company would
be liquidated, and the money transferred to a bank account pending
a trial, and could be ultimately sent back to the owner of the company
[if proven innocent]. Our interlocutors put great emphasis on the
respect of the rule of law, and stressed that the sale of assets
would require the permission of the owner of the company.
64. The Savings Deposit Insurance Fund was also entrusted to sell
or liquidate within one year the – now controversial – Bank Asya,
which is said to have funded the terrorist activities of the Gülen
movement. There had been two tenders, which had proved unsuccessful,
leading the TMSF to liquidate the bank. The Fund representatives
stressed that the money would be transferred back to the owners.
65. Considering the overall process of dismissals, lacking effective
remedies and the deficiencies of the current legal processes, many
questions remain open concerning the management, confiscation or
liquidation of seized properties, which has already given rise to
allegations of properties being sold to pro-government individuals.
Such process, marked by legal uncertainty and unfair competition,
could also have a detrimental effect on the economy and investment
plans.
66. We have also kept in mind the findings of the Venice Commission,
which deplored the permanent nature of the measures taken, including
the confiscation of assets, referring to Article 2.2 of Decree Law
No. 667 stipulating that “under no circumstances shall any claim
or demand related to all kinds of debts of those listed in paragraph
one be made against the Treasury”. For the Venice Commission “this
may be understood as meaning that the State confiscates the assets
of the liquidated entities, but does not accept their liabilities.
Such provision may unjustly penalise other economic actors, which
had contractual, labour and other relations to the liquidated entities
without, however, being involved in their allegedly unlawful activities”.
We thus encourage the Turkish authorities
to clarify this issue and ensure that the decree laws are amended
so as to ensure that all transfers of property to the State are
temporary, subject to final adjudication after the end of the state
of emergency and in full compliance with Article 6.1 of the European
Convention on Human Rights.
3.2.6. Impact
of the massive purges on individuals (“civilian death”)
67. The implementation of the decree
laws has had serious impacts, not only on the suspected individuals, but
also on their families: the cancellation of passports, confiscation
of assets, eviction of the family from publicly-owned housing. We
gained the same impression as the Political Affairs Committee’s
sub-committee, for which “the decrees impose sanctions or measures,
affecting the lives of hundreds of thousands of persons, including
not only of those directly concerned but also of their families,
in a permanent manner that is not limited in time to the emergency
of the situation”.
68. During our discussions, our interlocutors explained that being
dismissed resulted not only in a permanent ban on employment in
public administration, but also a ban on any job connected to public
services or public tenders. The teachers’ trade unions explained
that dismissed teachers could no longer work in any educational
structure, not even a private one. Three months after their dismissal,
the teachers no longer benefit from health care services.
69. We had many examples of teachers being dismissed on the sole
grounds that they had had trade union activities, or because they
were active in citizenship associations. This was deemed unacceptable,
even by institutions which were said to be close to the government.
70. As a result, measures which were supposed to target the coup
plotters and civil servants allegedly involved in it have automatically
impacted on their family members, with no respect for the presumption
of innocence. This amounts to collective punishment and to a blatant
interference with the privacy, family life and freedom of movement
of the family circle of those public servants, which, according
to the Venice Commission, would require particularly strong reasons.
71. We are also concerned about the effect, in the long term,
of the counter-coup measures which may affect up to one million
people according to estimations by the opposition party CHP, if
one takes into account the families of those dismissed, prosecuted
and arrested. Some of our interlocutors pointed out that the stigmatisation
of a significant segment of society, or its exclusion from the national
community (by the stripping of citizenship) could only pave the
way for new opposition circles that would develop outside the system
and be prone to foreign interference.
72. Thus, we strongly believe, as does the Commissioner for Human
Rights, that “deviations from the rule of law and human rights principles
may expedite the punishment of the guilty. … But such an approach
will leave indelible scars and be immensely detrimental in the long
run. The best antidote against terrorism is human rights and the
rule of law, including the use of due process and a reasoned, rational
approach. In the same vein, transparency is the best weapon against
a secret organisation which will most probably seek to harness and
exploit any sense of injustice or victimhood caused by haste”.
Such a perspective deserves deep reflection,
and we fear that these measures, amounting to a “civilian death”
for those concerned, will have a dramatic and detrimental long-term
effect on Turkish society, which will need to find the means and mechanisms
to overcome this trauma and rebuild an inclusive society.
3.2.7. Impact
of the massive purges on the functioning of democratic institutions
(judiciary, security forces)
73. During our visit, we had the
possibility to discuss with many officials whose institutions were
confronted with mass dismissals. For example, in the Savings Deposit
Insurance Fund, 12 out of 400 employees were dismissed; in the Metropolitan
Municipality of Istanbul, 800 out of 7 000 employees were dismissed
(100 of them were later reinstated), in a regional development agency
of Istanbul, 7 out of 57 were dismissed. We almost had the impression
that every public administration unit had to “deliver” its quota
of infiltrated Gülen members as a sign of loyalty to the State,
which, in itself, triggered many questions about the whole process.
74. We also concluded from information received that one quarter
of judges and prosecutors, a tenth of the police forces, and 30%
of the staff in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had been dismissed.
Such figures are very high, and despite the assurances given by
officials that the functioning of these institutions is back to
normal thanks to speedy recruitment procedures, there are legitimate
questions about the capacity of State institutions, which have been
significantly affected by the purges, to function normally. This
particularly affected the military and the security forces, at a
time when Turkey is facing multiple terrorist threats and engaged
in military operations both in Turkey and abroad.
75. In the education sector for example, trade unions indicated
that the mass dismissals and suspension of teachers had indeed resulted
for some time in restricted access by pupils to schools. New teachers
had indeed been recruited by the administration on a contractual
basis, but there were questions about the competence of these new
recruits, which resulted in pupils and students having difficulties
preparing and passing their exams. There was also a growing lack
of trust in the teachers, which in turn had had an impact on the
education provided.
76. With the publication of Decree Law No. 686 on 7 February 2017,
4 811 academics from 112 universities were dismissed under the state
of emergency.
Moreover, more than 33 000 members
of staff from the Ministry of Education were expelled by decree
laws, according to the figures released by the Minister of Education,
Mr Yılmaz.
77. The Assembly, and the Council of Europe as a whole, has paid
particular attention to the dismissal of judges and prosecutors.
The judiciary was one area which
was said to be the most “penetrated” by the Gülen movement. According
to Decree Law No. 667, this task was given to the supreme judicial
instances (the Constitutional Court, the Court of Cassation, the
Supreme Administrative Court, the Court of Accounts). Lower court
judges are dismissed by a decision of the High Council of Judges
and Prosecutors (HSYK).
It is a well-known fact that thousands
of judges and prosecutors were dismissed by the HSYK the day after
the coup, based on lists which had been prepared in advance.
78. These collective dismissals have also had an impact on the
functioning of the judiciary and its independence. The Venice Commission
pointed out that “judges represent a special category of public servants,
whose independence is guaranteed at the constitutional and international
levels … Therefore, any dismissals within the judiciary or the regulatory
bodies of the judiciary such as the HCJP, for example, should be
subjected to particularly exacting scrutiny, even in times of a
serious public emergency. Such dismissals not only affect human
rights of the individual judges concerned, they may also weaken
the judiciary as a whole. Finally, such dismissals may create a
‘chilling effect’ within the judiciary, making other judges reluctant
to reverse measures declared under the emergency decree laws out
of fear of becoming subjects of such measures themselves. These
measures may have adverse effects on the independence of the judiciary
and the effectiveness of the separation of powers within the State.
This ‘institutional dimension’ of the measures taken in respect
of judges thus deserves special attention”.
79. In conclusion, we consider that a state of emergency should
remain an exceptional regime. Eight months after the failed coup,
while the trials of the coup plotters are ongoing, the state of
emergency still allows the authorities to pursue large-scale purges,
which, in our understanding, go well beyond the reasonable goal
of punishing those who attempted to overthrow the democratic institutions.
As time passes, the necessity to maintain such an exceptional regime
raises serious questions. As rightly pointed out by the Venice Commission,
“the longer the situation persists, the lesser justification there
is for treating a situation as exceptional in nature with the consequence
that it cannot be addressed by application of normal legal tools”.
We
thus call on the Turkish authorities to lift the state of emergency
as soon as possible, in order to return to normality and avoid abuses.
4. Freedom of the media and of expression
80. The Assembly focused its
Resolution 2121 (2016) on the issue of freedom of the media and of expression.
In the light of the Opinion of the Venice Commission of March 2016,
it urged the Turkish authorities to revise several articles of the
Penal Code as well as the Anti-Terror Law so as to ensure that their implementation
and interpretation are compatible with the case-law of the European
Court of Human Rights.
Unfortunately, none if these requests
were addressed.
81. In June 2016, the Assembly’s co-rapporteurs highlighted the
numerous issues hampering media freedom, such as ownership, the
chilling effects of measures taken, investigations into critical
media holdings and the ongoing seizure of media outlets which had
been close to the Gülen movement, blocking of internet and social
media, etc. At that time, prominent investigative journalists such
as Can Dundar and Erdem Gül, were already facing prosecution for
leaking State secrets after they released information about arms
being sent to Syria by the Turkish secret services.
82. In this context, the emergency decree laws issued since August
2016 reinforced pressure on the media, with new waves of arrests
in the name of the fight against the “FETÖ/PYD” movement or the
PKK. This new crackdown on the media resulted in an even higher
number of journalists and media officers being put behind bars.
According to our figures, in the absence of official data provided
by the authorities, the number of journalists and media staff under
arrest or detention exceeds 150, and the process has targeted many
circles, for various reasons, which make us think that, today, any
independent, critical, non-obedient journalist, but also columnist,
writer or academic is at risk. Many have been in detention for more
than five months without any indictment. Let us mention here few
examples:
- the prominent newspaper
Cumhuriyet, one of Turkey’s oldest daily newspapers (founded in
1924), was targeted on 31 October 2016: 13 journalists, including
the Editor-in-Chief Murat Sabuncu and executive board members of
the Cumhuriyet Foundation were arrested, accused of “committing
crimes on behalf of FETÖ and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party
[PKK] without being a member”, aiming to “conceal the truth with
manipulation and publish stories that aimed to make Turkey ungovernable”.
Nine of them were placed in pretrial detention on 3 November 2016,
while four were released on bail and barred from travelling abroad. A detention order was issued against
former Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief
Can Dündar, who is currently abroad;
- as a culmination of the crackdown against Cumhuriyet, the arrest of prominent
investigative journalist Ahmet Sik for “support to the FETÖ and
the PKK”, at the end of December 2016, raises serious questions;
Ahmet Sik had, in 2011, spent 13 months in pretrial detention with
Nedim Sener – following a decision by judges allegedly close to
the Gülen movement – while he was investigating the Gülen movement’s
infiltration in the State administration. Some interlocutors considered
that the arrest of Ahmet Sik, one of the most outspokenly critical
– and knowledgeable – journalists about the Gülen movement, arrested
for “propaganda in favour of the FETÖ”, is turning recent developments
into an Orwellian situation;
- 25 of the 56 journalists who took over the position of editor-in-chief
of the Kurdish newspaper Özgür Gündem on
a rotating basis, as part of a campaign called “Editors-in-Chief
on Watch” to substitute the staff members who had been arrested,
are now themselves being prosecuted. This is the case of Reporters
Without Borders correspondent Erol Önderoglu, who spent ten days
in pretrial detention in June 2016, and faced 11 years in prison.
On 14 February 2017, in the absence of their lawyers, three of these
editors-in-chief – Cengiz Baysoy, İmam Canpolat and Çilem Küçükkeleş
– were sentenced to 1 year and 3 months in prison for “propagandising
for a terror group”. Mr Küçükkeleş was also fined 6 000 Turkish
lira for “publications promoting terrorism”.
83. Unfortunately, this list is far from exhaustive, and we could
add many other examples of journalists sued, arrested and sentenced.
The journalists we met in Turkey also have the feeling that selective
justice is being applied: on the one hand, journalists and columnists
working for pro-government media have the liberty to express themselves
without facing any prosecution, while critical journalists are under
fire and criminalised. There is a growing fear that, for a tweet
or a single chronicle, any journalist can be deprived of his/her
press card, passport, citizenship, or be put in prison.
84. In addition, economic pressure is being exerted on journalists’
associations (for one of them, the rent for its office was recently
increased tenfold) or via advertising: on 6 October 2016, the media
reported that “Turkey’s Press Advertisement Institution, the authority
for distributing official adverts to newspapers, announced that
it would not direct any business to publications whose owners, partners
or executives face terrorism charges, raising criticism from the
opposition and another organisation from the sector. Newspapers which
do not fire journalists who face such charges within five days will
also not benefit from official adverts, according to a regulation
published in the Official Gazette on 5 October 2016”.
85. The situation of the media in Turkey was also analysed at
length by Mr Volodymyr Ariev (Ukraine, EPP/CD) in his report on
“Attacks against journalists and media freedom in Europe”,
which was debated during the January
2017 part-session. A large section of his report is devoted to the
situation in Turkey, which has not improved since his previous report,
but has rather deteriorated. In its
Resolution 2141 (2017), the Assembly expressed “its concerns regarding the
dire situation for the media and journalists in Turkey under the
decrees passed during the state of emergency, in particular the
dissolution and seizure of assets of media companies, the detentions
of writers, journalists, editors and executives of media companies,
as well as the cases of deviations from criminal procedure law,
including access to a lawyer and the right to be informed promptly
of the nature and cause of the criminal charges”, calling on the
Turkish authorities “release from detention all journalists who
have not been indicted for actively participating in terrorist acts”,
to upgrade the legislation and to review, the emergency decree laws,
in so far as they order the arrest of writers and media staff and
the public seizure of media companies and their assets.
86. There are strong suspicions that we are today facing systematic
arrests of journalists, famous columnists and academics who are
perceived as being a threat to the State. There is also an unhealthy
climate for journalism: officials repeatedly denounced the “so-called”
journalists, the “disguised” journalists, and the “Western-orchestrated
media campaign” to justify the detention of journalists which, in
their view, was unrelated to their journalistic activity or for
opinions that they had expressed. We cannot subscribe to this assessment,
which contradicts our own evaluation of the situation and goes against
the founding principles of journalism and a free media, as understood
by the Council of Europe.
87. The case of Aslı Erdoğan is symptomatic: a novelist who had
done research on the Armenians and the Kurds, Asli Erdoğan was appointed
a member of the Publishing Consultancy Board of the Kurdish newspaper Özgür Gündem. She was not even a
journalists on, or owner of, the newspaper, she had no organic link
to it, but on 19 August 2016, Aslı Erdoğan (and others) was arrested,
a few days after the “temporary” closure of the paper by a court
order on 16 August 2016 on grounds of publishing “terror propaganda”
allegedly supporting the PKK. She was charged under Article 302
of the Penal Code (Disrupting the Unity and Integrity of the State), which
was a total shock to her. She faces aggravated life imprisonment.
She spent four and half months in prison before being released under
judicial control on 29 December 2016. Despite her poor health and
needing to take medication, she was deprived of water for 48 hours
(which was later denied by the Ministry of Justice), placed in solitary
confinement in a cold cell, with restricted contact with the outside
world (one phone call every two weeks). It was only due to international
pressure that was she allowed to see a lawyer after two days (instead
of five, as requested by the prosecutor), was taken to hospital
when this became necessary, and did not suffer torture as such.
However, we understand that the arrest of Aslı Erdoğan, a “White
Turk” researching on Kurds and other minorities, but by no means
a political activist, sends out a clear signal with a deterrent chilling
effect: today, anyone could be at risk of being arrested and imprisoned.
88. We also observed that the crackdown on media has silenced
many dissenting voices and put freedom of expression at high risk.
We met a number of representatives of human rights NGOs, the media,
and trade unions who are under enormous pressure – and exhausted
from their daily struggle to exercise their fundamental freedoms.
The crackdown on media freedom has also been documented by several
prominent international human rights organisations.
Unfortunately, the situation is
steadily deteriorating: there is a growing feeling of insecurity,
legal uncertainty and arbitrariness among human rights defenders
who feel that they could be subject, at any moment, to prosecution,
arrest and detention.
89. Our findings and concerns were confirmed by the Commissioner
for Human Rights, Nils Muižnieks, in his “Memorandum on freedom
of expression and media freedom in Turkey”, published on 15 February
2017.
The Commissioner, who has carried
out extensive work on Turkey during his mandate, has presented an alarming
state of play, depicting backsliding with respect to media pluralism
and independence, and safety and security of journalists. He noted
that the deterioration of freedom of expression and of the media
– which even worsened under the state of emergency – “goes hand-in-hand
with the erosion of the independence and impartiality of the Turkish
judiciary” leading to “a consistent pattern of judicial harassment
with a clear chilling effect that stifles criticism”. The Commissioner
points out the role of prosecutors and criminal judges for peace in
this process. The Monitoring Committee already raised concern about
this newly created institution and requested an opinion by the Venice
Commission, which it adopted in March 2017.
90. In his concluding remarks, the Commissioner stated that “Turkey
is on a very dangerous path, where legitimate dissent and criticism
of government policy is vilified and repressed, shrinking the scope
of democratic public debate, including directly inside the Turkish
Parliament, and polarising the society. Experience has shown time
and time again that it is precisely in such situations that hatred
and violence, as well as terrorist organisations, thrive”.
91. For Commissioner Muižnieks, “the ongoing state of emergency
confers almost limitless discretionary powers to the Turkish executive
to apply sweeping measures, including against the media and NGOs,
without any evidentiary requirement, in the absence of judicial
decisions and on the basis of vague criteria of alleged ‘connection’
to a terrorist organization”.
He thus urged the Turkish authorities
to take urgent measures to restore freedom of expression in Turkey
– a position we cannot but fully support.
92. We are awaiting an opinion by the Venice Commission on the
effects of the emergency measures on the freedom of the media. In
his report, Mr Jensen noted that the recent decrees also include
measures pertaining to the use of social media (obliging internet
service providers to share personal information about their subscribers
with the police without a court decision): “Given the thousands
of cases and arrests on grounds of insult and propaganda in social
media, this is a clear step to further persecute and stifle all
voices of opposition and criticism in this venue.” We fear that
Turkey is no longer meeting its Council of Europe obligations with respect
to freedom of the media and of expression, and we regret that the
repeated requests made by the Assembly, by the Commissioner for
Human Rights or by the Venice Commission to the Turkish authorities
to upgrade the legislation have remained, in most of cases, unaddressed.
5. Constitutional reform
5.1. Functioning of the democratic institutions
since June 2016: state of play
93. In June 2016, in its
Resolution 2121 (2016), the Assembly expressed its concern about the lifting
of the immunity of 154 MPs in May 2016. A total of 810 criminal
cases have been brought against MPs from all political parties.
However, whereas this concerns only 9% of AKP MPs, 23% of MHP MPs
and 38% of CHP MPs, it concerns 55 out of 59 HDP MPs, i.e. 93%,
including all four members of the HDP in the Turkish delegation
to our Assembly. In its opinion of 14-15 October 2016, the Venice
Commission described the lifting of immunity (i.e. inviolability)
of these members of parliament as an ad hoc, “one-shot” and
ad hominem measure, as well as a
misuse of the constitutional amendment procedure, thus not in line
with Council of Europe standards, and said “the inviolability of
the Members of Parliament should be restored”.
94. In the meantime, 12 HDP MPs, including its Co-Chairs, Mr Demirtaş
and Ms Yüksekdağ, are currently in pretrial detention on dozens
of charges including some related to terrorism. On 4 and 7 November
2016, 13 MPs from the HDP, including the two Co-Chairs, were arrested
as they had refused to follow the summons of the prosecutors to
be interrogated in relation to the criminal cases against them.
Three of them were subsequently released. Two more MPs from the
HDP party were arrested on 12 December, in the aftermath of the
Istanbul terrorist attack on 10 December, including the Deputy Chairperson
of the HDP. MP Leyla Birlik was released on 4 January 2017. MPs
Idris Baluken and MP Ferhat Encü were released on 30 January and 16 February
2017 respectively, while MP Meral Danış Beştaş and HDP spokesperson
MP Ayhan Bilgen were arrested on 31 January 2017. Several other
HDP members of parliament, including Leyla Zana, were arrested to
testify, and later released under judicial control. Hundreds of
party members have also been arrested.
95. For the Monitoring Committee, the arrests of MPs “jeopardise[d]
MPs’ freedom of expression as guaranteed by the European Convention
on Human Rights, referring to the
last
opinion adopted by the Venice Commission, which criticised the timing and
rationae of
that procedure”.
96. We were dismayed to learn that the Prosecutor's Office had
requested respectively 142 years’ and 83 years’ imprisonment for
the HDP Co-Chairs, Selahattin Demirtaş and Figen Yuksekdag. At the
same time, HDP MP Nursel Aydoğan was sentenced to 4 years 8 months
and 7 days in prison for “committing crimes on behalf of a terrorist
organisation and making propaganda” and “violation of the Law 2911”
(which regulates protests and demonstrations).
In
addition, the HDP co-chair, Ms Yuksedag, lost her parliamentary
mandate on 21 February 2017, i.e. three months after her 2013 conviction
was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Cassation in November 2016.
This is another source of concern.
97. On 20 January 2017, Mr Demirtas obtained his first acquittal
in a terrorism-related case. However, 102 summaries of proceedings
were still pending against him including charges of “managing a
terrorist organisation”, “inciting people to violence and hatred”,
and “praising crime and criminals”.
98. The developments related to the HDP Party, which obtained
five million votes in 2015 and passed the 10% threshold on June
and November 2015, will further ostracise the party: after being
evicted from discussions on the future constitution, the HDP party
members are being overtly and collectively labelled as “members
of the PKK” or “members of the TAK”. With one fifth of its MPs in
prison – including its two co-chairs, with no access to their party
members – and hundreds of staff members and local authorities arrested,
the party has, in practice, been rendered inoperative.
99. On 20 February 2017, the HDP lodged an application with the
European Court of Human Rights to protest against the violation
of the freedom of expression and security of its detained MPs.
100. At the local level, the situation pertaining to elected representatives
has also deteriorated: as at 31 January 2017, 81 co-mayors
from
the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP, a sister party to HDP) were under
arrest (Mardin Co-Mayor Ahmet Türk was later released on 3 February
2017), and “trustees” were appointed to 65 of the 103 municipalities
won by the BDP at the last local elections of 30 March 2014. The Congress
of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe is following
the situation: on 13 February 2017, its Monitoring Committee pointed
out that “the arrest and removal from office of many local elected representatives
seriously risk damaging pluralist democracy at the local level and
seriously weakening political parties and civil society”; and that
“the detentions of elected mayors and their replacement by ‘mayors appointed
by the central authorities’ in over 50 cities in south-east Turkey
– which is incompatible with Turkey’s commitments as a Party to
the European Charter of Local Self-Government – has effectively
suspended the practical exercise of local democracy in that region,
with most municipal councils of those cities ceasing to function,
and with almost six million Turkish citizens deprived of political
representation at the local level, which constitutes a contravention
of Article 7.1 of the Charter (the free exercise of the functions
of local elected representatives)”.
The Congress adopted a resolution
and a recommendation
on
29 March 2017, which is further explained in the addendum to this
report.
101. Unfortunately, neither Political Affairs Committee’s ad hoc
sub-committee nor the Assembly’s Presidential Committee were given
access to the detained MPs. Even we, the Assembly’s monitoring co-rapporteurs
who, in the past, had had access to prisoners, were denied visits.
We cannot understand why, notwithstanding the explanations given
by the authorities that this was to protect us from unpredictable
events inside the prisons. We thus firmly maintain our request that
Assembly rapporteurs, and other Assembly delegations be allowed
to visit the detained MPs and we trust that the authorities will
indeed effectively ensure that “all the premises where persons are
deprived of their liberty are open to both periodic and ad hoc visits
by national and international mechanisms as permitted by law”.
5.2. Adoption of constitutional amendments
by the parliament
102. The revision of the Constitution,
which is one of the 12 post-monitoring items, has been under discussion for
many years. There was already an attempt to draft a new, civilian
constitution in 2011-2013, when a multiparty Conciliation Committee
agreed on 60 articles after large public consultations were organised throughout
the country. The work of this committee was however terminated after
the AKP failed to put its proposal to establish a presidential system
on the agenda, due to the three other parties’ objecting.
103. The failed coup provided a moment of national unity among
political parties (with the exception of the HDP which was not invited
to the Yenikapi gathering) and an opportunity to relaunch discussions
on revision of the Constitution. Following an agreement between
the AKP and the Nationalist MHP, a package of 21 constitutional
amendments introducing a shift to a presidential system was submitted
to the parliament on 10 December 2016. This package, however, did
not include the articles previously agreed by the Conciliation Committee
and was not submitted to public consultation. The draft constitutional
amendments were supported by the AKP (316 seats) and the leadership
of the MHP (39 seats), but were fiercely opposed by the CHP (133 seats)
and the HDP (59 seats, including 11 MPs in detention). Pro memoria, at least 330 votes
were needed to adopt draft constitutional amendments to be sent
to referendum, or 367 votes to adopt the Constitution directly.
104. Firstly, we must emphasise here that the position of the co-rapporteurs
is very clear about constitutional reform: it is up to the people
to decide on a country’s political system. However, as rapporteurs,
it is within our mandate to ensure that the draft constitution complies
with the norms and standards of the Council of Europe. The Monitoring
Committee therefore asked, on 14 December 2016, the Venice Commission
to prepare an opinion on the constitutional amendments. The opinion
adopted by the Venice Commission on 10-11 March 2017 is reflected
in the addendum to this report.
105. While awaiting this opinion, we were able to examine the draft
constitutional amendments, which in our view raise serious concerns
about the separation of powers and the independence of justice.
It is for example striking that the members of the High Council
of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) will now be appointed by parliament
(nine members) and the President (four members), and that the Ministry
of Justice and the Undersecretary of Justice will also be members.
This is a regression compared to the reform introduced by referendum
in 2010, which allowed a majority of the HSYK members to be appointed
by their peers, in line with Council of Europe recommendations.
We thus fail to understand how the new constitutional amendments
could “truly strengthen the separation of powers”, “prevent potential
political crises” “prompt effective decision-making” or “protect
the pluralistic structure of the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors
(HSYK)”
as stated by high officials in recent
weeks.
106. We were present in Ankara during the first round of the voting
on the constitutional amendments and had meetings with the Turkish
delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly and members of the political
groups AKP, CHP and HDP (the MHP declined our invitation to meet).
The discussions in parliament were tense and polarised. Two brawls
erupted during the adoption of the amendments. The opposition challenged
the voting procedures, denouncing the absence of secret voting.
We raised the question with the Vice-Speaker of the Parliament,
stressing the need to ensure secret voting in line with the Turkish
Constitution, especially in a context when parliamentarians are
under (peer) pressure and when each vote is crucial for the outcome
of the debate.
107. We also expressed concern about the lack of consultation during
the preparation of this constitutional package and the limited information
provided to the public during the debates. We were told that the
Turkish Parliament has access to slots on the public channels on
Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, while the debates are streamed
on the internet TV channel of the parliament. This situation had
prompted several parliamentarians to set up their own broadcasting
channels (using their mobile phones).
108. We were told that those parliamentarians who were overtly
breaching the rules on secret voting had been “warned”, but that
the objective was to pass the amendments “as soon as possible”.
We found it regrettable that these amendments, which would change
Turkey’s political system from its current parliamentary system
to an executive-presidency, would be passed through hasty procedures.
109. On 15 January 2017, the parliament completed the adoption
of the constitutional amendments – all 18 amendments submitted were
adopted with a large majority (more than 340 votes, while only 330
were needed). On 21 January 2017, the parliament adopted the constitutional
amendments in second reading, with 339 votes, paving the way for
the organisation of a constitutional referendum on 16 April 2017.
110. The vote in parliament has further polarised the political
parties. A demonstration organised by the Turkish Bar Association
in front of the parliament building was terminated by the use of
pepper gas and water cannons by the police. Later that day, the
Governor of Ankara issued a 30-day ban on demonstrations in Ankara.
5.3. Preparation of the constitutional
referendum of 16 April 2017
111. During our visit in January
2017, we expressed our doubts about holding a constitutional referendum under
a state of emergency, which we believed would raise serious challenges:
the situation of media freedom is alarming and fundamental rights,
such as freedom of assembly, are likely to be restricted. There
are serious questions about whether political parties will be able
to campaign with equal opportunities under the state of emergency.
It seems likely that this will not be conducive to a level playing
field and a fair campaign environment.
112. On 21 January 2017, the Grand National Assembly adopted with
339 votes the 18 constitutional amendments, thus paving the way
for a constitutional referendum. If approved by the Turkish people,
the constitutional amendments will lead to a profound change in
Turkey’s political system, with a shift from a parliamentary to
a presidential system.
113. In its statement of 26 January 2017, the Monitoring Committee
stressed that the Turkish people are sovereign to decide on their
political future – and their decision will deserve full respect.
However, the committee expressed serious doubts about the desirability
of holding a referendum under the state of emergency and ongoing
security operations in south-east Turkey, referring to the rapid
adoption procedure in parliament (six weeks in all) marked by tense
debates, infringement of the secrecy of votes, absence of continuous
broadcasting of all parliamentary debates on television, and no
public consultation on the proposed changes.
114. The committee also expressed its deep concern as to whether
the revised Constitution – which will grant extensive powers to
the President of the Republic – would guarantee the separation of
powers, proper checks and balances and the independence of the judiciary,
which are prerequisites for democratic societies. It noted that
this constitutional revision would also deprive the parliament of
a large part of its fundamental role in making laws and supervising
the executive.
115. The committee also expressed its concern about access to comprehensive
information and fair access to the media by all political forces
during the referendum campaign, in a context marked by a climate
of suspicion and fear as a result of the implementation of the state
of emergency, lack of media freedom, journalists in detention, and
by the weakening of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) after the
detention of 12 of its MPs and hundreds of HDP officers. These measures
have had a deterrent effect and have led to serious restrictions
to democratic debate in the run-up to the constitutional referendum.
116. In this context, the Monitoring Committee urged the Turkish
authorities to ensure that the organisation and conduct of the referendum
complies with Council of Europe and Venice Commission guidelines
and the principles enshrined in the
European Convention on Human Rights. It feared that the overall
legitimacy of the process – and of the new Constitution itself –
could be put into question, if the authorities failed to address
the above-mentioned issues.
117. Concerning the content of the constitutional amendments submitted
to referendum, the Monitoring Committee requested the Venice Commission
to prepare an opinion on the constitutional amendments, so as to
address these fundamental issues. This opinion was adopted on 10-11
March 2017 and its conclusions are reflected in the addendum to
this report.
118. The Monitoring Committee also hopes that the Parliamentary
Assembly and other international partners will be invited to observe
the referendum, and that domestic NGOs will be accredited as observers,
as previously required by the Assembly. On 26 January 2017, the
Assembly’s Bureau decided to set up a 30-member ad hoc committee
to observe the referendum.
119. On 10 February 2017, President Erdoğan signed the constitutional
amendments, paving the way for the organisation of a referendum.
The Supreme Election Board announced on 13 February that the referendum would
be held on 16 April 2017 for 55 million voters inland and three
million abroad, who would be able to cast their votes in 57 countries.
120. A day earlier, Decree Law No. 687 was published. It strips
the Supreme Election Board of the authority to penalise TV and radio
stations that air one-sided broadcasts or biased propaganda during
election periods. This has cast a shadow on the capacity of the
authorities to abide with the obligation to ensure fair access to the
media by the “yes” and “no” partisans, in line with Venice Commission
guidelines. This has reinforced our concern about equal opportunities
for all sides to express themselves and be heard on a level playing
field. We also find it unacceptable that the authorities are resorting
to simplified and polarised rhetoric by calling those opposing the
referendum “terrorists” or “traitors”. This is not the kind of behaviour
expected from a democracy, and Turkey could draw inspiration from
good practices in conducting a referendum, such as that held on
the independence of Scotland.
6. Situation in south-east Turkey
121. Further to the previous report
on the functioning of democratic institutions in Turkey, we have
continued to follow the situation in south-east Turkey, where curfews
continue to be imposed on a temporary basis to conduct security
operations.
122. On 7 December 2016, the Commissioner for Human Rights published
a detailed memorandum on the “Human Rights Implications of Anti-Terrorism
Operations in South-Eastern Turkey”.
The
Commissioner considered these measures to have been “neither legal,
in the sense of being sufficiently foreseeable and defined in law,
nor proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued by Turkey … The
response the Turkish authorities developed since August 2015, characterised
by the declaration of open-ended, 24-hour curfews, have caused a
number of very serious human rights violations simply by virtue
of having been imposed on the affected local populations”. The Commissioner
thus urged the Turkish authorities “in the strongest possible terms
to put an immediate end to this practice. Any future measures deployed
in the region must show much higher regard to the human rights of
the local civilian population when balancing them against the imperative of
the fight against terrorism”.
123. In June 2016, the Assembly underlined the necessity to allow
reporting on human rights violations in south-east Turkey. We were
shocked to learn that four prominent human rights organisations,
which had issued a report on the situation in Cizre following the
security operations in August 2015, were facing prosecution under
Article 301 of the Penal Code. We note that the Commissioner himself
refers to “numerous” allegations of human rights violations committed
by security forces, that he finds to be “extremely serious and consistent”
and credible for many of them.
124. Despite the call made by the Assembly in June 2016,
on 23 June 2016 the parliament adopted
the law on the legal protection of security forces (also including
village and voluntary guards) involved in the fight against terrorist
organisations, which we interpret as giving greater impunity to
security forces involved in “anti-terrorist activities”. This raises
serious questions at a time when the country is under a state of
emergency and swift to prosecute under terrorist charges. The Commissioner
for Human Rights regretted in this respect that one of the first
measures taken in connection with the attempted coup of 15 July
2016 was to give administrative, legal and criminal immunity to
State agents enforcing emergency decrees, recalling that “impunity
has been a nefarious influence throughout Turkey’s recent history”.
125. This reinforces our concerns about the fight against torture
and ill-treatment. The Commissioner added that “all evidence indicates
that the authorities did neither treat with the requisite seriousness
the allegations of human rights violations, nor conduct ex officio criminal investigations
into lives lost during the operations in a way that would be liable
to shed light on the events. This situation falls woefully short
of Turkey’s international obligations”. “Given the elapsed time
since some of the operations, … it seems very improbable that any
future investigation will fully satisfy the criteria for effectiveness.
Unfortunately, Turkish authorities will therefore have to contend
with the fact that Turkey will be presumed to have committed many
serious human rights violations, including violations of the right
to life, during the period in question.”
126. The issue of compensation has not been addressed in a satisfactory
manner. The Commissioner considers that “the existing framework
for compensation appears clearly insufficient in many respects”,
and that expropriating the local population in certain cities affected
by the operations would represent a “double punishment for the persons
affected and cannot be considered a form of redress”.
127. Recent concerns emerged about the situation of the village
of Kuruköy (Nusaybin), after curfews were declared in nine villages
of Mardin’s districts on 11 February 2017. There were claims that
three people had been killed and 39 others detained and tortured
in Kuruköy. These claims could not be confirmed or investigated,
as a delegation of the HDP party was not allowed to enter the village,
which remained
incommunicado for
10 days.
128. We also note that on 15 December 2016, the European Court
of Human Rights decided to communicate various complaints in the
34 applications concerning the curfew measures taken in Turkey since
August 2015 to the Turkish Government and has asked them to submit
their observations. These cases were given priority treatment.
We
will continue to monitor the situation in the south-east.
7. Conclusions
129. In the light of recent conclusions
of the Council of Europe monitoring mechanisms, the assessment made
by the Political Affairs Committee’s ad hoc sub-committee and our
own findings, we conclude that the massive purges operated after
the failed coup of 15 July 2016 constitute the continuation – and
deepening – of an ongoing process. While it was fully legitimate
to declare the state of emergency after the failed military coup,
which resulted in 248 deaths and 2 000 wounded, the government is
interpreting its extraordinary powers too extensively and has taken
measures that have gone far beyond anything permitted by the Turkish Constitution
and by international law. These measures have had the effect of
further silencing critical voices and removing “undesirable” civil
servants, also affecting their families, and have fostered a climate
of fear, suspicion and polarisation of society. This raises the
question of proportionality and necessity. As stressed by the Commissioner
for Human Rights, in line with the principles of the rule of law
and human rights standards, “any interference with basic human rights
[needs] to be defined in law, necessary in a democratic society
and strictly proportionate to the aim pursued”.
130. In this context, we are alarmed by the state of media freedom
and the systematic breaches of the freedom of expression, which
constitute a serious infringement of Council of Europe obligations.
131. We are also concerned by the scale of the purges and their
long-term effect on Turkish society: Turkey will need to find the
means and mechanisms to overcome this massive purge, and rebuild
an inclusive nation.
132. The Assembly takes note of the adoption of a package of constitutional
amendments on 21 January 2017. If approved by the people through
referendum, this constitutional revision would result in a profound change
of political system – a shift from a parliamentary to a presidential
system. The Assembly emphasises that it is the sole right of the
Turkish citizens to decide on the political regime they wish to
have, provided that sufficient information is given to the voters
and that enough time is allocated to public debate. However, in
the light of the constitutional amendments, adopted with rapid parliamentary
procedures and highly polarised debates, and while awaiting the
opinion by the Venice Commission, the Assembly expresses its deep
concern about the envisaged checks and balances, separation of powers,
independence of the judiciary and the competencies left to the parliament,
which will no longer supervise the executive.
133. The Assembly has, on numerous occasions, recalled that Turkey
is a strategic partner for the Council of Europe, and repeatedly
called for a constructive dialogue with Turkey, one of its oldest
members and one of the first signatories of the European Convention
on Human Rights, in 1950.
134. This is the reason why we reiterate our desire and willingness
to continue the dialogue with the Turkish authorities and enhance
co-operation. This includes the renewed support of the Assembly
in Turkey’s fight against terrorism, which should uphold fundamental
freedoms. We also reiterate our willingness to assist the country
in its democratic transformation process by ensuring that Turkish
policies comply with Council of Europe standards. We appreciate
the ongoing dialogue between the authorities and the Council of
Europe, which needs to be a two-way dialogue – and we hope that
the dialogue will further lead to concrete results.
135. However, the failed coup highlighted some serious dysfunctions
within Turkey’s democratic institutions and requires the full attention
of the Parliamentary Assembly, based on the three pillars of the
Council of Europe which comprise a wide range of issues. In the
current circumstances, the consideration of the 12 items defined
as part of the post-monitoring dialogue could be seen as irrelevant.
We also regret that
Resolution
2121 (2016) of June 2016 on the functioning of democratic institutions
in Turkey, which highlighted a number of serious shortcomings in
Turkey’s compliance with its obligations towards the Council of
Europe, has remained unaddressed.
136. The Assembly is determined to continue the dialogue and co-operation
with Turkey and offer its support in the difficult times the country
is facing. In the wake of the failed coup, which revealed serious
dysfunctioning within Turkey’s democratic institutions, the Assembly
believes that the post-coup developments, including the implementation
of the state of emergency, have had large-scale, disproportionate
and long-lasting effects on the protection of fundamental freedoms,
the functioning of democratic institutions and on all sections of
society. It notes that the disproportionate measures taken (150 000
civil servants, military officers, judges, teachers and academics
dismissed, 100 000 individuals prosecuted and 40 000 of them detained),
the prevailing legal uncertainty despite recent steps taken by the
authorities, and the consequences of the emergency decree laws on
individuals and their families, has created a climate of suspicion
and fear which is detrimental to social cohesion and stability.
137. At the same time, we stress once again, in line with the position
endorsed by the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy in
December 2016, that we remain committed to a constructive dialogue
with Turkey, which must continue to play its role in the Parliamentary
Assembly and the Council of Europe. In our view, the monitoring
of developments in Turkey needs to be intensified and broadened
– as does the dialogue with the Turkish people on these developments,
taking into account the Assembly’s concerns in this respect. The Assembly
has an approved and well-developed mechanism for such a process:
the full monitoring procedure.
138. The Assembly should strengthen and intensify its monitoring
of the developments in Turkey and its dialogue with all forces in
the country in order to ensure that the serious concerns it has
expressed about the respect for human rights, democracy and the
rule of law are addressed. The Assembly should therefore decide to
reopen the monitoring procedure in respect of Turkey until its concerns
are addressed in a satisfactory manner. In particular, Turkey should,
as a matter of priority:
- lift
the state of emergency as soon as possible;
- in the meantime, halt the publication of emergency decree
laws which bypass parliamentary procedures, unless strictly needed
under the state of emergency law, and put an end to the collective
dismissal of civil servants through emergency decree laws;
- release all the detained parliamentarians pending trial;
- release all the imprisoned journalists pending trial;
- establish and launch the work of the Inquiry Commission
on State of Emergency Measures to ensure an effective national judicial
remedy for those dismissed through emergency decree laws;
- ensure fair trials with respect for due procedural guarantees;
- take urgent measures to restore freedom of expression
and of the media, in line with Assembly Resolution 2121 (2016) and Resolution
2141 (2017), and with the recommendations of the Commissioner for
Human Rights and the Venice Commission;
- organise the April 2017 constitutional referendum in line
with Council of Europe standards and the Venice Commission’s Code
of good practice on referendums, so as to guarantee the freedom
of voters to form an opinion;
- implement as soon as possible the recommendations of the
Venice Commission concerning the constitutional amendments.
139. We will continue to follow the developments in Turkey closely
and would recommend that the Monitoring Committee considers reporting
to the Assembly on the progress made in addressing its concerns,
and possible action to be undertaken by the Assembly, during a part-session
of the Assembly in 2018.