Serious implications of nude searches in Erdogan's prisons
The repercussions of the scandal revealed in the prisons of Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan continue to confirm the falsehood of the
religious allegations of the Justice and Development Party (AKP), as official
accusations were leveled against opposition MP Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu after he
highlighted the exposure of veiled women to nude searches in security centers
and prisons following their arrest on charges of belonging to the Hizmet
movement.
The director of Usak security, Masoud Jazar, and a number of
other security personnel filed a communication in Usak city court against Gergerlioglu,
using the harsher words against him such as "traitor",
"bloodsucker" and "who does not flow from his mouth but
blood."
After this step, Gergerlioglu posted a tweet in which he
stated that the government accused him of lying and also spread slander against
him, after he proposed investigating the nude inspection. He added, “They were
not satisfied with this, but also filed a complaint against me. But I thank God
that I am not supported by the government but by the people. I am an honest
person, my hearing is clean, and I have never lied in my life. Together, let us
end this violation and not back down from this mistake.”
Gergerlioglu criticized the authorities’ failure to take
measures against those responsible for the violations in the detention centers,
noting that about 30 Turkish women were subjected to a humiliating assault by
forcing them to undergo nude inspections at the Usak police headquarters with
no necessary action and without investigation.
Well-known Turkish writer and journalist Orhan Kemal Cengiz
commented on the targeting of Gergerlioglu, a parliamentarian for the Kurdish
Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP).
In an article on his personal blog, Cengiz discussed the
reasons for the government’s efforts to silence Gergerlioglu, describing him as
"the voice of the damned and demonized by the regime."
Cengiz stressed that Gergerlioglu is one of the rare
parliamentary figures who loudly convey the grievances faced by different
groups in the country under various pretexts to the parliament at a time when even
its victims are afraid.
Cengiz explained that Gergerlioglu spent his life since the
1997 coup and to this day defending human rights, saying, “The ruling authority
that sanctifies veiled women wants to silence Gergerlioglu because he has
placed it before the spotless truth that is the search of veiled women naked in
the security directorates and prisons.”
The denial of AKP leaders that there was a shameful
inspection of women in prisons caused anger at the victims themselves, until
they decided to break their silence and talk about the tragedy.
One of the victims, lawyer Batul Alpay, revealed the exact
date and place she was subjected to nude searches, explaining that she was
arrested with her father, and then she was imprisoned and stripped of clothes
in prison, and they ordered her to sit and stand three times, noting that “if
the security cameras in the prison were examined during the day of November 2,
2017, you will see that I was exposed to x-rays among four male guards.”
Teacher Tuba Ozdemir, another victim of the nude inspection,
said, “I had a nervous breakdown when they asked me to remove all my clothes.
It was the worst day of my life.”
Natalie Avazian, Zakia Atach, Hajer Koch, and journalist
Nour Anar Kılıncı also shared a video clip on social media in which they talked
about their exposure to this scandalous practice as well.
Prominent Turkish journalist Meyser Yildiz said that she is
an eyewitness to the practice of nude inspections of women inside prisons in
Turkey, which AKP leaders insist on denying.
Yildiz, who was released from prison last month, confirmed
that she remained silent until a week ago, when Gergerlioglu began talking
about the nude inspection of about 30 women in Usak prison.
She added that she had first waited for officials to act,
noting that the officials should look at what was said and not look at the
people themselves, so an immediate investigation should have been carried out
to reveal what happened.
The second reason she waited is that she wanted the Turkish
Ministry of Justice to make a statement, but so far it has not issued any
statement.
Yildiz, who was on trial on charges of revealing state
secrets, referred in two articles about the Turkish military role in Libya to
these shameful crimes.



