Global protests against imprisonment of children in Turkey
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan violated human rights after the fictitious coup,
in July 2016, where thousands of Turkish citizens were arrested on charges of
joining and communicating with Fethullah Gülen.
Citizens
organized in many countries around the world demonstrations against the
violations committed by the Turkish President; especially that these violations
affected children significantly.
Thousands
have gathered in Leipzig to take part in protests demanding the release of
children that were detained along with their mothers in the jails of Erdogan.
The
protesters held banners reading "11,000 women and 864 children in Turkish
prisons" and "release children from prisons". Activists
considered that imprisoning children without charges is a clear violation of
human rights and international laws.
Activists
and rights activists in the United States also organized a demonstration,on
Sept. 26, in conjunction with the 74th session of the United Nations General
Assembly, to denounce the imprisonment of children with their mothers in
Turkey.
In a press
release, the organizers confirmed that pregnant women and Turkish mothers were
subjected to significant psychological harm in prison as a result of their
arbitrary imprisonment, demanding the Turkish government to release them.
The Turkish
authorities have adopted a series of violations since the mock coup of summer
2016; women were being arrested along with their children and babies for fake
charges, including joining the opposition group of Fethullah Gülen.
Mesale Tolu,
a journalist who was detained for months in Turkey, with her 3-year-old son,
for alleged terror links, is returning to Istanbul to appear in court.
In 2019 Tolu
published a book on her case entitled „Mein Sohn bleibt bei mir!“: Als
politische Geisel in türkischer Haft und warum es noch nicht zu Ende ist
("My son stays with me!: As a political hostage in Turkish imprisonment
and why it hasn't ended yet").
The arrest
of the children with their mothers is only a fraction of the broader abuses
carried out by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan among Turkish citizens.
According to
Turkish Minister of Interior, Süleyman Soylu, the number of those exported from
the police force only after Dec. 17-25 and July 15 through the Decree Law is
about 33 thousand for joining and communicating with Fethullah Gülen.
Soylu has
further added that 511,000 were detained while 30,821 were arrested in the
country since the 2016 failed coup attempt in operations against Gülen
movement, reported the state-run Anadolu Agency.
"38,578
were dismissed and 5,679 were suspended from our ministry until now. Some of
the suspended are behind bars. 31,000 of those were from police department
while 4,159 were gendarme, 348 were coast guards and there were some from civil
administration," said Soylu.