
Eyes of the world on Turkey as show trial of human rights activists beginsย
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- Trumped upย charges against the 11 arrested in Istanbul exposed
- Forensic analysis shows Amnesty Chairย did not download Bylock
- Spokespeople available on the ground for trials on October 25 & 26
Trumped upย charges against 11 human rights defenders, including Amnesty Internationalโs Turkey director and chair, do not stand up to the slightest scrutiny, said Amnesty International as court proceedings begin in Istanbul and Izmir.
The charges against them – carryingย jail terms of up toย 15 years andย set out in two indictments to be heard in two separate trials โ are entirely baseless.
โFrom the moment of their detentions, it has been clear that these areย politically motivated prosecutions aimed at silencing critical voices within Turkey,โ said John Dalhuisen, Amnesty Internationalโs Europe Director.
โWithout substance or foundation the Turkish authorities have tried and failed to build a case against ฤฐdil, Taner and the other nine human rights activists. It took the prosecutor more than three months to come up with nothing. It should not take the judge more than half an hour to dismiss the case against them.โ
Ten activists, including ฤฐdil Eser, the Director of Amnesty Turkey, were arrested on 5 July, whilst Amnesty Internationalโs Turkey Chair, Taner Kฤฑlฤฑรง, was arrested a month earlier. They are accused of โmembership of a terrorist organisationโ.
The charges against the 11 include outlandish claims that standard human rights protection activities amount to assisting terrorist organisations. These include appealing to stop the sale of tear gas, making a grant application, and campaigning for the release of hunger-striking teachers. According to the indictment, ฤฐdilย Eser is linked to three unrelated and opposing terrorist organisations and some of the allegations against her refer to two Amnesty International documents which were issued before she even joined the organisation.
The prosecution unsurprisingly offers no evidence to support their allegations that the Bรผyรผkada workshop, where the arrests took place, was a โsecret meeting to organise a Gezi-type uprisingโ or that any of the defendants were engaged in wrongdoing. Amnesty International has made a detailed analysis of the indictment, addressing each of the allegations made against the 11 defendants.
As well as the hearing against the 11 which begins in Istanbul today, Taner Kฤฑlฤฑรง will also appear at a hearing tomorrow in Izmir on a separate charge ofย โmembership of the Fethullah Gรผlen Terrorist Organisationโ.
This charge is basedย on the allegation that he downloaded and used the ByLock messaging application, claimed to have beenย used byย the Gรผlen movement to communicate. However,ย two independent forensic analyses of Tanerโs phone commissioned by Amnesty International found that there is no trace of Bylock ever having been on his phone.
The trials come as international pressure mounts on Turkey to release the human rights defenders. Worldwide protests marked 100 days imprisonment for ten of those arrested and the birthday of Idil Eser and last week, the secretary-general of the Council of Europe, Thorbjรธrn Jagland, the president of the European Parliament, Antonio Tajani, and the Chair of the Human Rights Committee in the European Parliament, Pier Antonio Panzeri, all called for their release.
They join a long list of governments, institutions and political figures that have demanded their release including European Commission, the US State Department, UN officials, Angela Merkel and the German government as well as the Austrian, Irish and Belgian governments.
โThese two trials will be an acid test for the Turkish justice system and will demonstrate whetherย standing up for human rights has now become a crime in Turkey,โย said John Dalhuisen.
โIf justฤฑce can be subverted by aย dystopian fiction woven fromย absurd and baseless allegations, it will be a dark day forย Turkeyโs justice system and a grim omen for the future of human rights in the country. With the eyes of the world on these courtrooms in Istanbul and Izmir the time has come for the long overdue unconditional release of our colleagues.โ

