Turkey arrests 101 HDP members

PACE Turkey monitors call for the immediate release of arrested opposition members.

Turkish police forces have arrested 101 HDP opposition members. Foto: Mahmut Bozarslan / VoA / Wikimedia Commons / PD

(CoE / Red) – “We are greatly concerned by the detention warrants issued against 101 members of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) on 25 September and 1st October 2020, notably for their alleged responsibility in the 2014 ‘Kobane protests’”, said PACE (Parlementary Assembly of the Council of Europe) co-rapporteurs for the monitoring of Turkey, Thomas Hammarberg (Sweden, SOC) and John Howell (United Kingdom, EC/DA).

“Prominent party members and elected representatives, including the co-Mayors of Kars Ayhan Bilgen and Şevin Alaca, former PACE member Nazmi Gür and former deputy Sırrı Süreyya Önder, were arrested on grounds that raise serious questions. These arrests come on top of the earlier convictions of former HDP co-Chairs Selahattin Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ as part of this investigation. They also contradict the 2017 ruling of Turkey’s Constitutional Court that found a violation of Ayhan Bilgen’s rights following his previous detention in the same case.”

“The arrests of these political opponents and their continued detention will further diminish, obstruct or undermine the ability of opposition politicians to exercise their rights and fulfil their democratic roles, both inside and outside parliament, and could render opposition parties inoperative,“ as already stated by the Parliamentary Assembly in a January 2019 resolution. Likewise, the request made by the Prosecutor’s Office to lift the immunity of seven HDP deputies for the functions they assumed on the Central Executive Board of their party at the time of the protests is of great concern.”

“Political opposition is an essential component of a well-functioning and vivid democracy. We therefore call on the Turkish authorities to immediately release the detained political elected representatives and party members, to protect and respect parliamentary immunity, to fully implement the European Court of Human Rights’ rulings and to release former HDP co-Chair Selahattin Demirtaş,” the co-rapporteurs concluded.

Arresting the opposition is all but a democratic measure. Considering the aggressive statements made yesterday by the Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who insulted the European institutions, there are but small chances that Turkey, under this government, finds the way back to a democratic system. Sooner or later, new sanctions will have to be pronounced against Turkey.

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