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1.77 mln investigations launched in Turkey on terrorism allegations from 2016 to 2021

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A total of 1,768,000 investigations were launched into people in Turkey on allegations of membership in an armed terrorist organization between 2016 and 2021, the Stockholm Center for Freedom reported, citing the Bold Medya news website.

According to Bold Medya’s report citing judicial statistics, a total of 1,576,000 investigations were launched in Turkey on terrorist organization membership allegations between 2016 and 2020, and some 192,000 investigations were initiated in 2021.

The Justice Ministry has not yet announced the data on investigations in 2022.

According to a report by Mustafa Yeneroğlu, a former politician from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and current İstanbul deputy from the Democracy and Progress Party (DEVA), these investigations have impacted around 8 million people.

Scores of people in Turkey have been investigated, detained, prosecuted, arrested or expelled from public service, some even without the formality of an investigation, especially following a coup attempt on July 15, 2016.

Turkey experienced a controversial military coup attempt on the night of July 15, 2016 that killed 251 people and wounded more than a thousand others. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his AKP government immediately pinned the blame on the Gülen movement, a faith-based group inspired by Muslim preacher Fethullah Gülen, labeling them it as a terrorist organization.

Although Gülen and the movement strongly deny involvement in the abortive putsch or any terrorist activity, Erdoğan initiated a widespread purge aimed at cleansing sympathizers of the movement from within state institutions, dehumanizing its popular figures and putting them in custody.

The crackdown led to the summary dismissal of more than 130,000 public servants, including 4,156 judges and prosecutors, as well as 24,706 members of the armed forces, for alleged membership in or relationships with “terrorist organizations” by emergency decree-laws subject to neither judicial nor parliamentary scrutiny.

The vague and imprecise charge of “membership in an armed terrorist organization” appears to be repeatedly misused to target critics of the Turkish government’s policies and to criminalize the legitimate activities of supporters of the Gülen movement, said the vice chair of the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention and three special rapporteurs in a letter to the Turkish government in 2020.

The UN letter requested that the Turkish government respond to questions about the cases of 43 Turkish citizens who applied to the UN with individual allegations of arbitrary arrest, detention and/or prosecution in the context of, or in the aftermath of, an abortive putsch in July 2016.

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