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Turkey: KCK-trial of journalists, judge
refuses to allow pleas in Kurdish
13.9.2012 |
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September 13, 2012
ISTANBUL,— Demands for pleading in
Kurdish marked the first hearing of the Kurdistan
Communities Union (KCK) trial of 44 journalists on
Monday. Chief Justice Ali Alçık also filed a
complaint against the court audience during the
second hearing on Tuesday and refused to enter the
defense lawyers’ pleas into the court records.
The Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) trial of 44
pro-Kurdish journalists
kicked off on
Monday at the Istanbul 14th High Criminal Court in
an electric atmosphere with Chief Justice Ali Alçık
and defense lawyers exchanging angry words, while
the judge also refused to enter the defense lawyers'
pleas into the court records on Tuesday and filed a
complaint against the court audience who applauded
him in protest of his refusal to allow lawyers to
speak.
Judge Alçık announced a recess even before the trial
began during the first hearing on Monday following a
spat with the defense lawyers. He also demanded that
the audience leave the courtroom, but the suspects'
families and others observing the trial refused to
comply with his request.
The court accepted the defendants' response "Ez li
virim" ("I am here" in Kurdish) during the initial
roll call.
"Specially authorized courts were abolished
following the ratification of the Third Judicial
Reform Package. These courts are temporary. The
reasoning cited in the reform package was that these
courts cannot conduct a fair trial. This court has
no warrant to proceed," lawyer Baran Doğan told the
judge at the beginning of the trial.
Chief Justice Alçık then lashed out at the defense
lawyers who were speaking among themselves and
denied suspect journalist Ertuş Bozkurt his request
to issue his plea in Kurdish.
"Are you going to speak in Kurdish? Why should we
grant you the right to speak then? If there is
anyone willing to speak in Turkish, we are going to
let them talk," Judge Alçık said in response to
Bozkurt.
"We are not making a demand for a right. Speaking in
one's mother tounge is like breathing. Have you ever
heard of anyone making a request to breathe? If you
deny the right to plead in one's mother tounge, then
your court will regress back to the time of the
Sept. 12, [1980 coup,]" said suspect Yüksel Genç.
"We are under more different circumstances than in
2001. There is a television channel broadcasting in
Kurdish 24 hours a day. The state accepted the
Kurds' existence,www.ekurd.net
universities opened up Kurdish language departments.
The introduction of elective Kurdish courses is on
the table. Denying the right to plead in their
mother tounge violates the journalists' right to
defense. A translator should be assigned to them.
The Mardin Artuklu University or TRT Şeş
(state-owned Kurdish broadcasting channel) could
provide a translator," lawyer Deniz Çelik also told
the court.
The defense lawyers questioned why the court did not
record the trial with a sound device and requested
to sit next to the suspects.
News reports turn into
criminal activities
Some 44 journalists are currently facing charges in
the case, 36 of them arrested pending trial on Dec.
24, 2011.
Suspects Nurettin Fırat, Ertuş Bozkurt, Mazlum
Özdemir, Turabi Kışın, Ramazan Pekgöz, Şeyhmus Fidan,
Hüseyin Deniz, Yüksel Genç, Nevin Erdemir, Semiha
Alankuş, Davut Uçar and Kenan Kırkaya are charged
with "being the manager of the KCK/PKK (Kurdistan
Workers' Party)" in accordance with the fifth
article of the Anti-Terror Law and article 314/1 of
the Turkish Penal Code (TCK.)
Sibel Güler, Mehmet Emin Yıldırım, Zuhal Tekiner,
İrfan Bilgiç, Ömer Çelenk, Haydar Tekin, Ömer Çiftçi,
Selahattin Aslan, Dilek Demiral, Nahide Ermiş,
Çağdaş Kaplan, Nilgün Yıldız, Çiğdem Aslan, Cihan
Albay, Sadık Topaloğlu, Ayşe Oyman, İsmail Yıldız,
Fatma Koçak, Oktay Candemir, Pervin Yerlikaya Babir,
Çağdaş Ulus, Zeynep Kuray, Şerafettin Sürmeli, Eylem
Sürmeli, Sultan Güneş Ünsal, Murat Eroğlu, Evrim
Kepenek, Hamza Sürmeli and Arzu Demir are also
facing the charge of "being a member of a terrorist
organization" in accordance with the fifth article
of the Anti-Terror Law and article 314/1 of the TCK.
Ziya Çiçekçi, Saffet Orman and Enis Yalçın are also
charged with being members of a terrorist
organization through the same articles, as well as
violating article 33/1 of the Law of Assembly and
Demonstration.
The journalists waited for eight months before the
first hearing took place. The 800 pages long
indictment is mostly composed of news reports and
telephone conversations made for journalistic
purposes.
"Courts will accept Kurdish
pleas in the near future"
"It was the morning of Sept. 12, [1980,] and I was a
child. Soldiers kept coming to our home. I did not
understand what was going on. I did not know any
Turkish, and I was five years old. 30 years have
passed by, but there are still [security]
operations, the children still do not speak any
Turkish, and they get beaten up by soldiers whose
language they do not understand," lawyer İnan Poyraz
told the judge in Kurdish and then proceeded to
translate his own remarks into Turkish.
"Turkey is not even abiding by the international
treaties that it signed. If the Treaty of Lausanne
[of 1923] is to be accepted, then Kurds must be
allowed to express themselves in their native tounge
in all courts and state offices," he said.
Meral Danış Beştaş also said the repression of the
press had reached alarming levels during the reign
of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP.)
Lawyer Abdülbaki Boğa further added that the refusal
of specially authorized courts to recognize the
right to plead in one's native language constituted
an act of crime that went against the constitution.
Lawyer Boğa said independent courts were committing
this crime without shame, while Chief Justice Alçık
responded that it was the people uttering these
comments in court who should be ashamed instead.
"I learned that Kurds were living in this country
during my college years. It was forbidden to speak
Kurdish during the 1980s, but another struggle came
about, leading to a [hefty] price. Nobody is
discussing about the existence of the Kurdish
language anymore today. I served for three years in
jail on the grounds that I had called a group of
people 'Kurds.' You would also reject such an
indictment if it had arrived before you now. Life is
changing," said Eşber Yağmurdereli.
"I also participated in the KCK trial in [the
southeastern province of] Diyarbakir two years ago,
and there was a problem about pleading in one's
native language there, too. The court delegation
there referred to Kurdish as an 'unknown language.'
You have now used the words 'Kurd' and 'Kurdish'
here, and you are still using them," he said.
"There is only one threshold we need to pass.
Nothing could be more natural for the suspects to
plead in Kurdish since they are from the Kurdish
media. For as long as Turkey's Kurdish problem
continues to persist, and their most natural rights
are criminalized, then we have reached a threshold.
I do not think that the refusal in these trials to
allow for pleading in Kurdish will last that long.
Courts will begin to accept pleas in people's mother
tounges in the near future," he added.
International support for
the arrested journalists
The Peace and Democracy Party's (BDP) co-chair
Gültan Kışanak, BDP deputy leader Meral Danış Beştaş,
Prof. Büşra Ersanlı, the BDP's Şırnak Deputy Hasip
Kaplan, Mersin Deputy Ertuğrul Kürkçü, Istanbul
Deputies Sırrı Süreyya Önder, Levent Tüzel and
Sebahat Tuncel, Van Independent Deputy Aysel Tuğluk,
The People's Republican Party's (CHP) Denizli Deputy
İlhan Cihaner, Istanbul Deputies Melda Onur and
Oktay Ekşi, Istanbul Deputy Provincial Head Zeynep
Altıok, Hakan Tahmaz from the Peace Council, Gençay
Gürsoy from the People's Democratic Congress (HDK,)
lawyer Eşber Yağmurdereli, as well as journalists
Aslı Aydıntaşbaş, Yıldırım Türker, Ahmet Şık, Nuray
Mert, Nazım Alpman, Hayko Bağdat, Ertuğrul Mavioğlu,
Oktay Ekşi, Hilmi Hacaloğlu, Berrin Karakaş, Kadri
Gürsel, Erol Önderoğlu, Rober Koptaş and Tuğçe
Tatari were all present in the trial.
Delegations from Europe also arrived to observe the
suit:
International legal expert and former deputy Prof.
Norman Paech, DIE LINKE Hessen Parliamentary Group
President Willi Van Ooyen, Neues Deutschland's
Editor in Chief Jürgen Reents, Joachim Legatis and
Michael Backmund from the Union of German
Journalists (DJU,) Hessen Rosa Luxemburg
Foundation's manager Murat Çakır, human rights
defender Wolfgang Kanz, journalists Edgar Auth,
Dinah Riese and Benjamin Hiller, as well as
representatives from the International Press
Institute also attended the hearing.
Lawyers' pleas go
unrecorded
Lawyer Hüseyin Boğatekin said the case file
contained evidence that was in violation of the laws
and requested the suspects' acquittal during the
second hearing of the trial on Tuesday. Hundreds
have been arrested in similar cases based on the
testimonies of secret witnesses, he added.
"Trials of this kind prove that [they] want a 'state
press.' This was what had happened in the time of
the Nazis, too. This indictment is a political and
conjectural document that needs to be retracted. The
mindset that dominates this indictment regards news
reports about democratic autonomy, hydroelectric
dams and peace as criminal activies. While news
stories about the civilian [protests in Friday
prayers] do not constitute a crime [when presented]
in mainstream media, they are regarded as
organizational activities for the Kurdish press,"
lawyer Ercan Kanar said, adding that the trial
represented a dark spot in the history of
journalism.
"[They] are also preventing the right of the Turkish
public to receive news. The prosecutor is mocking
and belittling the people by using such terms as
'so-called Kurdistan,' 'so-called opposition,' 'the
so-called future of the Kurdish people' in the
indictment. Everything that is regarded as
acceptable for mainstream media turns into a crime
when the Kurdish press [reports it.] I demand the
rejection of this indictment on the grounds that it
is chauvinistic, discriminatory and
politically-motivated. These are suits filed against
peaceful methods to solve the Kurdish problem. Would
these trials have come about if the Oslo process was
still intact?" he asked.
Lawyer Eren Keskin also noted that news reports
about the Pozantı Prison and the Roboski massacre
were first penned down by the journalists now
standing trial in the court, and that these issues
were later debated throughout the entire media
establishment in Turkey. "News reports made not with
great money but with great courage," he also
referred to the press stories mentioned in the
indictment.
Chief Justice Alçık did not allow lawyer Baran Doğan
to speak, however.
"[You] do not get the floor 10 times over. I already
let you speak on the same issue twice over," Judge
Alçık said.
When Doğan said he was going to talk about another
matter pertaining to procedures, Judge Alçık once
more denied his request to speak.
Lawyer Davut Erkan then broke into the conversation
and said they had enacted a division of labor
whereby Doğan would speak about matters of
procedure.
"We have already made a decision. You can leave [the
courtroom] if you have any objections. We will go
into recess unless you comply with the order in
court," Justice Alçık responded.
Chief Justice Alçık also refused to enter the
lawyers' statements into the court records and ruled
to continue the trial without any audience on the
grounds that they had protested the court delegation
by applauding. He also decided to file a criminal
complaint against the audience by identifying them
through camera records in the court.
By Ayça Sölemez - Bia News Center
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency,
bianet.org
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