Erdogan's violations against the Kurds…21 Kurdish politicians sentenced to prison for terrorism
144 years is the total outcome of the prison
sentences handed down by the Penal Court in Mardin Province, southern Turkey,
to 21 Kurdish politicians in the case in which 50 politicians are being tried.
According to the Turkish newspaper, Al-Zaman, among
the courts, mayors of Kyzyl Tappa and Artoklu were removed from their posts in
2016, as part of the "Union of Kurdish Communities" case in Mardin.
The court, which has been examining the case file
since 2014, held the sentencing session on Thursday, June 25 and sentenced
several defendants to the prison sentence.
Six defendants were sentenced to 8 years in prison
on charges of "belonging to a terrorist organization", while 6
defendants were sentenced to 6 years and 3 months imprisonment against 11
defendants, and three defendants were sentenced to 7 years and 6 months in
prison, and one defendant was sentenced to 9 years imprisonment.
While the court issued a verdict acquitting 10 of
the defendants, while the trial of 19 others continues pending the same case.
The Mardine Penal Court’s decisions coincided with
the country's Supreme Court’s rejection of a request by the Kurdish Democratic
People’s Party to cancel the parliament’s decision to drop the membership of
two members of his party for their conviction for terrorism, as the Turkish
parliament had canceled the membership of Laila Govin early this June, as well
as MP Musa Faris Ugullari, to begin After that an open sit-in in several cities
protested the decision, but the police intervened and broke up the sit-in
forcibly.
The Kurdish Democratic Peoples Party demands the
release of its former president, Salahuddin Demirtaş,
who has been in prison for four years on terrorism-related charges, and Demirtaş
is still in prison despite the Supreme Constitutional Court’s recent admission
that his right to freedom has been violated and he has ordered financial
compensation.
Turkish opposition parties accuse Turkish President
Erdogan of using the judiciary to punish his political opponents, and it is
based on this that he tightened his control over him after he appointed judges
and prosecutors who are described as totally indebted to him.
On the other hand, Erdogan accuses the Kurdish
Democratic Peoples Party, represented in the Turkish parliament, of 65
deputies, as the political wing of the PKK. He took this as an opportunity to
permanently restrict his members and deputies in Parliament and the
municipalities he won.
It is noteworthy that in October of last year, a
Turkish court sentenced 5 Kurdish politicians to 45 years in prison, including
the member of the Council of Democratic Territories detained by Iram Demirhan,
who was then suffering a significant deterioration in his health.
The day after the criminal court sentenced 21
Kurdish politicians to prison, the Public Prosecution Office in the city of
Diyarbakir, in the southeast of the country, late Friday, June 26, issued a
decision to arrest 64 people, 42 of whom were arrested on suspicion of having
links with the PKK.
Among the detainees were former mayors of the Kurdish
Democratic Peoples' Party.
The arrests were based on investigations carried out
by the Public Prosecution since 2018 in the mainly Kurdish state of Diyarbakir.
Among the detainees were Muhammad Demir, the former
Batman mayor, who was dismissed by a decision of the Ministry of the Interior,
and the isolated Mayor of Silwan also called Nashida Toprak, as well as leaders
of the HDP.
The security forces carried out the arrests in the
states of Istanbul, Diyarbakir, Izmir, Batman, Adana and Urufa, to arrest 42
suspects, while the pursuit of others continues.
According to press reports, the Kurdish-dominated
provinces of southeast Turkey are witnessing major security violations under
the pretext of chasing the PKK, as the authorities launch from time to time
large-scale detention campaigns targeting the Kurds; Allegedly that they
support the aforementioned party, which causes them to pretend from time to
time to reject repression.
It is noteworthy that international organizations,
especially the United Nations, along with local human rights organizations in
Turkey were revealed through documented reports of Erdogan's government
violations in the field of human rights.




