Violations of Political Prisoners' Rights - Turkey PDF Print Email

Presented by Acilim Legal Bureau

30 May 2010

There is a prison problem in Turkey that has reached such dimensions that not only has it aroused public discussion in the country, it also has begun to attract world public opinion. This is specially as a result of massacres, oppression and torture in the last ten years where  more than 200 people died,  more than 1000 have been left crippled and many suffered from great illness. Severely repressive conditions have been systematically maintained in F-type prison cells subject to a regime of isolation since 2000. Inmates who are held in one and  three person cells, are isolated from each other and the outside world and the prisoners suffer serious problems.

The isolation system is not the main force of the state. The primary method of the state to keep the upper hand of authority and to crush any resistance and political action, is the method of violence. The physical dimension of violence cannot always be sustained, so it assumes the form of the abolition of what limited rights exist and the restriction to the greatest extent possible of breathing room and platforms on which action can be taken. This takes the form of disciplinary punishment that have the accoutrement of legal procedure.


Disciplinary actions have a permanent basis; their dimensions are so extensive that they are universal, being found in all areas of life and exercised at every opportunity. The disciplinary punishment is used as  a means of intimidation, suppression and subjugation. The attempt is made to crush any demand or response to events in the daily lives of prisoners and, most importantly, the positions taken on political topics through disciplinary actions. For example, the price paid for celebrating May Day or engaging in a three-day hunger strike as a gesture of support for a journalist detained in any country in the world, is imposing disciplinary action. These punishments include not only restricting access to face-to-face visitation, telephone conversation, exchanging letters and communication, but also restrictions on defense, receiving sufficient information and self development. There are inmates who have faced various rights violations for months, even years, as a consequence of these punishments. This situation greatly increases the severity of the already harsh conditions of imprisonment. Moreover, isolation from the outside world has an extremely adverse impact on prisoners, both physically and psychologically. This makes F-type prisons, which are already grave in terms of human rights, even more intolerable.

The prisons’ Disciplinary Committee, which imposes these punishments is an administrative body having no judicial authority on lawyers serving on it. It consists of prison personnel and, therefore, makes decisions that are “relevant”. However, the problem does not end here; the “Judges of Execution,” established to provide so-called judicial oversight of the situation, functions as a body that has a function of blindly approving decisions of the Disciplinary Committee. At this time, thousands, if not tens of thousands, of decisions have been made in prisons as a whole, and there are not even ten cases to be found where appeals to the decisions have been considered. Moreover, while there appears to be a right to petition Criminal Courts to appeal the decisions of the “Judges of Execution,” the verdicts of these courts are nothing more than pure formality. By default, they end up confirming such decisions by rejecting petitions on the perfunctory grounds, “petition rejected because it does not conform to procedure and the law.”

Being subject to such punishment by having no legal basis and having their legal initiatives aborted affect them as least as much as this deprivation does, and creates a psychologically traumatic situation. Therefore, the conditions under which they have to serve their prison sentences are made even more severe; because of these practices, which demoralize them, they are under great duress. From the point of view of prisoners, this practice, which has continued for many long years, has turned into an inhumane form of treatment/punishment.

The final stop on the appeals process stemming from the arbitrary imposition of disciplinary actions and the repressive regime is the European Court of Human Rights. However, in spite of efforts having been made for a long time, apart from a single example, no favorable verdicts have been obtained yet. In this case, the deprivation of visiting rights for one year of a prisoner by the name of Ali Gulmez was viewed as disrespect for family life, while his being denied judicial recourse to effectively object to the penalties imposed on him was seen as a violation of the right to a fair hearing (20 May 2008).

There are thousands of prison petition made collectively and individually before the court. Of these, most of these concern disciplinary action. However, no steps whatsoever have been taken to improve this situation in Turkish prisons.  The resistance of the state will, of course, be broken and the area of the rights and freedoms in prisons will be expanded. #