Top European judges decry situation of Turkey’s judiciary, ECtHR’s role
Several executives from
European-based judges’ associations in a series of interviews with the Arrested
Lawyers Initiative slammed the political control over Turkey’s judiciary as
well as the position taken by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR)
vis-à-vis the deteriorating situation in the country in recent years, Turkish
Minute reported.
Filipe Marques, president of
the Magistrats Européens pour la Démocratie et les Libertés (MEDEL), said, “The
human rights situation in Turkey is appalling: a judiciary under control of the
executive, prisoners in solitary confinement for years without basic rights,
mass dismissals and arrests with absolutely no guarantees.”
José Igreja Matos, president
of the European Association of Judges, also condemned the treatment of legal
professionals in Turkey.
“The suffering of our
Turkish colleagues since 2016 has been horrific and remains to this very day
unspeakably painful for all of us; following the detention of several thousands
of judges and prosecutors, including that of Murat Arslan, president of the
now-shuttered Association for the Union of Judges and Prosecutors (YARSAV),”
Matos said.
Massive post-coup purge
against members of the judiciary
Turkey disbarred more than
4,000 judges and prosecutors immediately after an abortive military coup in
July 2016 over alleged ties to the faith-based Gülen movement, which it accused
of orchestrating the attempted putsch. The movement denies any involvement.
The mass disbarment of
members of the judiciary is believed by many to have had a chilling effect on
the entire justice system, intimidating the remaining judges and prosecutors
into doing the government’s bidding by launching politically motivated
investigations into critics.
Top European rights court
accused of failure to act
The ECtHR, the top European
human rights reviewing body, has also been criticized for its failure to
address the situation in Turkey. The ECtHR has dismissed individual
applications of those summarily removed from public service by emergency
decree-laws, asking applicants to first exhaust domestic remedies.
The court has also failed to
deliver judgments on some of the applications, such as that of journalist and
author Ahmet Altan, who since 2016 has been imprisoned on account of his
writings. Altan’s case, to which the ECtHR had granted priority status, has
been pending before the court since January 2017.
The ECtHR has also deemed
inadmissible requests for interim measures filed by former Turkish judges and
prosecutors who are kept in solitary confinement.
“Since the beginning of the
situation in Turkey, MEDEL and other institutions have addressed the ECtHR,
asking for interim measures, as it was clearly evident for us that the lack of
independence of the judiciary in Turkey meant that there was an emergency
situation and that there was no possibility of domestic remedy,” Marques said.
“The ECtHR, however, has systematically refused to adopt interim measures.”
The European judges also
argued that the ECtHR’s stance on Turkey will significantly affect its legacy.
“Four years later, we are
still waiting for decisions from the ECtHR. I think the ECtHR must face this
issue seriously and look at it as a matter of its own credibility – the
reputation it has built during the years, of the main guardian of human rights
in Europe,” Marques said.
Manuel Soares, president of
the Union Association of the Portuguese Judges (ASJP), said: “The ECtHR cannot
turn a blind eye to glaring illegalities. If it does so, it will be denying its
role, betraying the trust it has built up over the years and condemning itself
to disbelief and irrelevance.”
“The ECtHR existed before
Turkey’s current dictatorial power and will endure after its end. Crises are
transitory, but what is right must be permanent and stable,” Soares said.
Should Turkey’s
Constitutional Court be seen as a means of domestic remedy?
President of the Association
of European Administrative Judges Edith Zeller and Matos of the European
Association of Judges said they believe the ECtHR should stop considering Turkey’s
Constitutional Court as a means of effective domestic remedy.
“In the actual situation,
there is no independent judiciary in Turkey, and there is no effective domestic
remedy,” Zeller said.
“The actions of the Turkish
Constitutional Court over the last years eloquently speaks for itself,” Matos
said.
Tamara Trotman, president of
Judges for Judges, elaborated on the Constitutional Court’s role.
“When we look at the way the
Turkish Constitutional Court handled the case of judge Yıldırım Turan,
completely disregarding the ECtHR decision in the case of judge Hakan Baş and see
the inaction of the court regarding the ongoing detention in the case of human
rights defender Osman Kavala, despite the fact that the ECtHR called on the
government of Turkey to take measures to secure his immediate release, I assume
the tipping point is within sight,” Trotman said.
Back in July, Turkey’s
Constitutional Court delivered a judgment on the case of imprisoned former
judge Turan in which it defied a previous ECtHR ruling that found judge Hakan
Baş’s pre-trial
detention to be in violation of the European Convention on Human Rights.
The Constitutional Court
verdict described the ECtHR’s divergence from Turkish courts in interpreting
domestic law as “unacceptable” and argued that Turkish courts were “much better
positioned than the ECtHR for explaining and interpreting the provisions of
Turkish law.”
“I am afraid we are lulling
ourselves to sleep if one still thinks the Turkish Constitutional Court can be
an effective agent of change under the present conditions,” Trotman said.



