The News
Sunday 22 of December 2024

Turkey Working With Council of Europe on Post-Coup Prosecutions


Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu addresses the media in Ankara,photo: Reuters/Umit Bektas
Turkey's Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu addresses the media in Ankara,photo: Reuters/Umit Bektas
The EU, which Turkey aspires to join, is concerned that Ankara applies its anti-terrorism laws too broadly in order to prosecute critics of Erdogan

A delegation from Turkey’s justice ministry has met with the Council of Europe to review European human rights standards and conventions as Ankara prepares to prosecute those it holds responsible for a failed July 15 coup, the head of the CoE said.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu will also meet with other ministers from the 47-nation rights body in Strasbourg, France, on Wednesday, Thorbjorn Jagland, general secretary of the CoE, told journalists on Tuesday on the sidelines of a conference hosted by the German foreign ministry.

“We have been working with them. We want to see to it that the judicial safeguards are in place,” Jagland said. “They have in mind that if they don’t put this in place that many of these cases will land in court in Strasbourg.”

The meeting with the Turkish justice ministry delegation took place last Friday, Jagland said.

Turkey’s discussions with the CoE come amid efforts by European leaders to ease tensions that flared after the coup and loud criticism by several European Union leaders of President Tayyip Erdogan’s post-coup crackdown,

Strasbourg is home to the European Court of Human Rights, which rules on individual or state allegations of violations of civil and political rights. Turkey ratified the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) in 1954.

Unlike the European Union, the CoE cannot make binding laws, but it has the power to enforce select international agreements reached by its members, which include Turkey. The court, a body of the council, enforces the ECHR.

The court’s website said it dealt with more than 3,200 applications concerning Turkey in 2015, of which 3,060 were declared inadmissible. Of the 87 judgments it delivered, 79 found at least one violation of the human rights convention.

“We have thousands of cases already. We shouldn’t have any more cases,” Jagland said.

The EU, which Turkey aspires to join, is concerned that Ankara applies its anti-terrorism laws too broadly in order to prosecute critics of Erdogan and has made easing them a precondition for granting Turks visa-free travel to the bloc.

Jagland said the CoE was working with Turkey to address cases where the court had found violations of European rights to freedom of expression due to the application of Turkey’s laws, and in some cases, perhaps even the laws themselves.

The CoE’s discussions with Ankara are separate from Turkey’s visa liberalization talks with the 28-member EU, but could help Ankara better understand which laws it needs to revise, he said.

ANDREA SHALAL