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Presented by Acilim Legal Bureau - Turkey
30 May 2010
Just because various conventions have been signed that classify or recognize torture as a crime requiring several punishments according to law, or that define torture as inhuman treatment, and that prohibits torture, does not mean that torture is or will automatically be punished. Experiences in Turkey clearly prove this.
Despite torture being defined as a criminal offense requiring criminal punishment, and the endorsement of all international conventions on the subject, torture is taken under “impunity.” Because the perpetrators of torture are public officials and it is understood that their actions are for the public (state) good, most of the time they do not face prosecution. In rare cases which manage to get to the courts due to the legal actions of public forces, these end with dismissal, or the dropping of the charges due to statute of limitations, or are postponed under the frame of trivial punishments.
Contrary to this discourse, this situation is not only a problem that existed in the past. It remains as today’s and tomorrow’s issues and “apologizes” for torture, insisting on continuing its illegal and decadent approach. One of the most interesting examples is the case of Engin Ceber that clearly shows that the state that talks so much about “none tolerance towards torture”, that “apologizes” for appearances of torture cases, continues its dissenting posture to law and moral under any circumstances.
Engin Çeber was taken into custody on 28 August, 2008, for distributing a legal magazine. For ten days of legal proceedings following his arrest, he was subjected to heavy torture by every public official he faced, including the members of the police and gendarmerie, and guards. On 10 August, 2008, he died as the result of this torture.
It is interesting that the investigation of this case was conducted by the prosecutor responsible for his death. Quite naturally, a secret order was imposed on the investigation to keep the public from obtaining sufficient information. The perpetrators tried erasing camera footage. This was not the only attempt to keep the torture under wraps; because the witnesses which were mainly prisoners and convicts to the case were threatened and told not to tell the truth.
Because it was thought that they would reveal the truth, witnesses were not brought to the court. The voice recordings giving their accounts of what happened were suspiciously lost. Expert witnesses were asked to prepare false reports. Torture witnesses were kept in special prisons. These prison wardens pronounced as terrorists the families seeking their rights, and sent one document after another to this effect to the courts. Professional solidarity was shown by the collection of donations in Turkish prisons under the guise of assistance to the killers.
All of these actions, designed to leave torture unpunished, were futile to a certain extent as the public became more actively involved in the case. Security camera footage was retrieved. Forensic medical reports clearly stated that torture had occurred. Witnesses, as soon as they were released, did not hesitate to tell the truth. The killers were identified one by one. Expert witness reports confirmed torture. Legal proceedings were initiated against those who prepared false expert witness reports.
However, they were insistent on not punishing them. A full 18 months later a new prosecutor was appointed to the case.
At the first hearing of the case, 39 guards, three directors, one doctor, 13 policemen, and four members of the gendarmerie were present. The prosecutor requested the acquittal of 42 defendants and the imposition of minor penalties, falling within the purview of those that can be postponed, for 16 of them. Of all the torturers, only 2 guards were held accountable. Thus, the 10-day systematic torture perpetrated by members of the police and gendarmerie, and guards, was transformed into the personal offenses of two guards.
They want to seek impunity for torture once again but the struggle of democratic powers and progressive lawyers is persistently continuing.
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