1. The rapporteur of the Committee
on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, Mr Boriss Cilevičs, has prepared a
report drawing attention to the need of protecting freedom of expression
in Council of Europe member States, in particular when it concerns
the work of parliamentarians and politicians in general. Mr Cilevičs’
report focuses on developments that took place in Turkey and Spain
but is based on the Council’s acquis in
the area of freedom of expression that is applicable to all member
States.
2. I wish to highlight that the wide scope of the title of the
report makes it difficult to determine what the real objective of
the report is. Although it is clear that its central theme is the
protection of the right to freedom of expression by politicians
and their ability to freely exercise their political mandates, which
I support, I also believe that the Council of Europe must not fail
in its efforts to protect the rule of law in the implementation
of these mandates and that this perspective should not have a subsidiary
or secondary character when analysing certain facts or realities.
At the same time, it appears that an analysis of the global situation
in Council of Europe member States may be necessary. I believe that
we will all agree that the persecution of political leaders exercising
their mandates is inacceptable in any Council of Europe member State.
3. While the report and the draft resolution focus on parliamentarians,
I consider it useful to extend the scope of the text and include
an explicit reference to other people who are active in politics,
namely the members of elected bodies at local and regional levels,
and those who conduct political work without an official mandate.
All of them have a role to play in democratic life. They contribute
to the political debate, have administrative responsibilities and
represent their voters. Even though the first interlocutors of the
Assembly are national parliaments, it is also worth mentioning politicians
who are not parliamentarians and underline that they are entitled
to their freedom of expression as well.
4. It is also important to take into account the case law of
the European Court of Human Rights as regards the issues debated
in the report, as well as the texts adopted by the Council of Europe’s
European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission),
in particular concerning the separation of powers and the need to
respect independence of the judiciary.
5. Among the documents I used to prepare this document is an
opinion of the Venice Commission on “The replacement of elected
candidates and mayors”, prepared following a request made in 2019
by Mr Andreas Kiefer, Secretary General of the Congress of Local
and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe, and which was
adopted on 18 June 2020. I consider this source relevant to the
situation of Kurdish politicians in Turkey, but also because of
its references to the principle of rule of law, which I believe
is worth mentioning in the draft resolution that we are amending.
As the Venice Commission highlights, the rule of law is referred
to in the Preamble to the Statute of the Council of Europe as one
of the three “principles which form the basis of all genuine democracy”,
together with individual freedom and political liberty, and has
been consistently referred to in the major political documents of
the Council of Europe, and in numerous conventions and recommendations.
It is also mentioned as an element of common heritage in the Preamble
to the European Convention of Human Rights (STE No. 5, “the Convention”).
6. I would like to underline that the continuous persecution
of pro-Kurdish politicians in Turkey (in my opinion underestimated
in the report, which does not fully reflect the appalling situation
that the country is experiencing) and the specific events that took
place in Catalonia on the occasion of the declaration of independence
without valid legal effect are, unfortunately, far from being the
only cases that deserve to be analysed within the Council of Europe’s
geographical scope. I wish to highlight that serious situations
of persecution are occurring in other Council of Europe member States,
where the possibility for politicians to freely exercise their mandates
cannot, unfortunately, be taken for granted. While the report focuses
on Turkey and Spain, this does not mean that other Council of Europe
member States are not concerned by this type of human rights violation.
7. In my opinion, the situation in Turkey deserves even more
attention from the Assembly. The fact of presenting it in a parallel
with the specific events in Spain may make it more difficult to
grasp the hard reality of what is happening in Turkey. After studying
the Turkish case in depth and exchanging calls and taking part in
videoconferences with political leaders of the Peoples’ Democratic
Party (HDP), I came to the conclusion that the systematic persecution
of HDP politicians in Turkey since 2015, which has been documented
by the Committee on the Honouring of Obligations and Commitments
by Member States of the Council of Europe (Monitoring Committee)
,
calls for a specific report, even more detailed than the one we
are discussing. I will take the initiative to propose such a report
in the near future. Meanwhile, I seize the opportunity offered by
this opinion to complement the information contained in Mr Cilevičs’
report with details on recent developments. Among other things,
what happened in Turkey after the local elections in 2019 is a reason
for great concern.
8. At least 47 mayors and 11 deputy mayors have been imprisoned
after the 2019 municipal elections and replaced by “trustees” appointed
by national authorities; most of the mayors and deputy mayors had
won the elections as representatives of the HDP party in areas with
a large Kurdish-speaking population. In some cases, there were also
mayors representing the Republican People’s Party (CHP) party in
some cities or towns outside this region. In its resolution of 19
May 2021 on the 2019-2020 European Commission Reports on Turkey,
the European Parliament indicates that the replacement and imprisonment
had been decided “on the basis of questionable evidence”. The text
rightly adds that “these unlawful decisions constitute a direct
attack on the most basic principles of democracy, depriving millions
of voters of their democratically elected representation”. In October
2020, the Assembly strongly condemned these dismissals and replacements
of mayors, which contradict democratic principles.
9. These worrying developments were also analysed by the Venice
Commission in the opinion that I have already mentioned. The opinion
highlights that the 2019 local elections were not conducted under
the state of emergency declared after the failed coup attempt of
July 2016, which had ceased after the parliamentary elections in
2018. However, the mass arrest and prosecution of more than 100 000
persons and the dismissal of more than 150 000 civil servants by
emergency decrees “were still resonating in the society, affecting especially
the judiciary where about one third of civil servants had been dismissed”.
In addition, many of the measures adopted during the state of emergency
were subsequently transformed into regular laws and their provisions
were thus applicable in the 2019 local elections.
10. The election observation report of the Congress of Local and
Regional Authorities also indicates that “dozens of local elected
Mayors and Councillors (mostly from the HDP) in more than fifty
towns, especially in the south-east of the country, were placed
in pre-trial detention on grounds of accusations of terrorist links
and were replaced with trustees appointed by the central authorities.”
In addition, “around 125 000 persons were not eligible to run in
the local elections on grounds of having been dismissed from office
by state-of-emergency decrees, mostly due to terrorism-related charges.”
11. These details and figures clearly show that politicians, particularly
those from the HDP and from South-East Turkey, had to endure a climate
of intimidation and persecution through the arbitrary interference
of the central authorities, rendering impossible the conduct political
activity for many of them.
12. These are only the latest episodes of a long story of discrimination
and political marginalisation of Kurdish people in Turkey. In 2012,
the online news outlet Open Democracy wrote that many expected Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan’s Government to step up democratic initiatives in Turkey,
as his party had announced a policy called “Democratic Opening”.
“However, the South-eastern Kurdish region, home for an estimated
25 million Kurds, has chronicled another story since, one that echoes
State racism, discrimination on ethnic grounds and brutal crackdown
on dissent.”
13. Discrimination certainly affects political life, as “cases
against HDP politicians provide the starkest evidence that authorities
bring criminal prosecution and use detention in bad faith and for
political purposes”, according to Human Rights Watch’s yearly report
“Turkey – Events of 2019”. But it also concerns education, culture,
the media and other spheres. The same report states that “journalists
working for Kurdish media in Turkey continue to be disproportionately
targeted and there are severe restrictions on critical reporting
from the southeast of the country”, and it adds that hundreds of
academics have been convicted of “spreading terrorist propaganda”
for criticising the government’s military operations in the southeast
and calling for a peace process. They were later acquitted thanks
to a ruling of the Constitutional Court.
14. It is clear the victims of the various human rights violations
observed in Turkey which I have mentioned are associated with the
Kurdish-speaking population living in the country, particularly
in South-East Turkey. This calls for a more effective and consistent
enforcement of the Council of Europe human rights protection system,
particularly those provisions concerning the prohibition of discrimination
and the protection of minorities. Article 14 of the Convention,
under the title “Prohibition of discrimination”, stipulates that
“the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention
shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex,
race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national
or social origin, association with a national minority, property,
birth or other status”. The reference to “association with a national
minority” ensures that this article applies not only to members
of a particular national group, but also to those who take a stance
in favour of the rights and interests of such a group. The persecution
of Kurdish politicians should be considered both as a violation
of their freedom of expression and assembly, and a form of discrimination
on grounds of their association with the Kurdish minority. The report
and draft resolution of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human
Rights offer therefore a good opportunity to draw attention to this provision
of the Convention.
15. Is it also an opportunity to highlight the relevance of the
Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (ETS
No. 157), a Council of Europe convention adopted in 1994 which sets
out the rights enjoyed by individuals belonging to national minorities
and the corresponding obligations to be respected by the State Parties.
The Framework Convention is the first binding legal text on this
matter and its implementation is monitored by the Advisory Committee.
Enforcing the Framework Convention would radically improve the situation
of the Kurdish minority in Turkey. However, Turkey has not even
signed this text despite a long-standing request from the Assembly
made in the framework of the Assembly post-monitoring dialogue with Turkey
from 2004 to 2017.
I am therefore
proposing an amendment to the draft resolution to invite the Turkish authorities
to sign, ratify and ensure the implementation of the Framework Convention.
16. In addition to the serious political consequences on democracy,
the arbitrary replacement and imprisonment decisions that I mentioned
have had a severe impact on citizens and their life conditions,
since harsh budget cuts have been applied to the municipalities
concerned. This means that citizens have not been able to access
basic and fundamental services, even during the pandemic period.
This also applies to cities run by mayors of opposition parties
who have not been removed, including Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and
other municipalities in the South-East of the country. “Political,
legislative, financial and administrative measures [were] taken
by the government to paralyse” those municipalities, notes the European
Parliament. Furthermore, women’s shelters and other infrastructure
providing services to women have been closed by the central government.
This has coincided with Turkey's withdrawal from the Convention
on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic
violence (CETS No. 210) in what appears to be an attack on women’s
rights and gender equality, after years of gradual backsliding in
this area and the loss of much of the progress previously achieved.
17. As regards the parts of the report and draft resolution on
Spain, I would like to develop some considerations about the country’s
criminal code provisions on sedition and rebellion. I can only welcome
the draft resolution’s call on the Spanish authorities to reform
such provisions and also the fact that the Spanish Government and
authorities have indeed brought this issue to public debate. The
definition of these crimes and the relevant sanctions do need to
be updated: a comparison with similar provisions in other European
criminal law systems shows sanctions in Spain are particularly severe
and that the current definition of sedition is too vague, which
may lead to uncertainty in its application. The definition should
therefore be reworded to obtain a clear and more restrictive provision.
In particular, the need of respecting freedom of expression should
be taken into account when redrafting the relevant articles of the
criminal code, especially when there is no use of violence.
18. The time allocated for the preparation of this opinion did
not allow me to conduct research and to exchange with relevant interlocutors.
Despite the constraints, I have endeavoured to contribute in a constructive
manner and to formulate amendments that may complement and add value
to the draft resolution. In addition, as I have previously mentioned,
I intend to promote a motion for a resolution that would lead the Assembly
to work further on the situation in Turkey and provide additional
indications on how to address it.