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ANKARA: We Are Ruining The Foundations Of Justice In Turkey

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  • ANKARA: We Are Ruining The Foundations Of Justice In Turkey

    WE ARE RUINING THE FOUNDATIONS OF JUSTICE IN TURKEY

    TDN
    Thursday, April 13, 2006

    The chief prosecutor of the Turkish supreme court, Nurettin Ok,
    must definitely stand behind a recent statement he made about how the
    leadership of Turkey has not put enough importance on the independence
    of justice in this country and how politics has made its way into
    the justice system itself.

    Mehmet Ali Birand

    Nurettin Ok, the chief prosecutor of the Turkish supreme court,
    must definitely stand behind a recent statement he made about how the
    leadership of Turkey has not put enough importance on the independence
    of justice in this country and how politics has made its way into
    the justice system itself. Ok's analysis of the situation is spot
    on. He has touched on the most important reason for the crisis being
    experienced in the system today. There are phrases that you repeated
    over and over in the government. They go: "Justice is independent. No
    one should fear the scales of justice. Justice will arrive at the
    truth."

    The public, however, perceives things a bit differently. Whether true
    or not, the public sees these phrases as sometimes being hollow,
    sometimes meaningful, but definitely not consistent. This is the
    result of some of the justice system's past acts. In his column
    on Tuesday Hurriyet's Ertugrul Ozkok gave a few clear examples of
    what I'm talking about. Pointing at a list of allegations about
    the Welfare Party (RP) and the Milli Gorus (National View) movement
    prepared by two of our most famous prosecutors, Savas and Yuksel,
    Ozkok notes that rather than relying on any concrete evidence, these
    allegations were based on personal opinions. What Ozkok says in his
    column in true. This is also the impression among many members of
    our society. Our leaders give the impression they are pleased with
    the results emerging from the courts, which reflect the conditions
    of the day or the direction the political winds are blowing. Let's
    look back into the past a bit... The words of former Justice Minister
    Sami Turk, who said Article 312 of the penal code was interpreted in
    an exaggerated manner, had a great effect on the public.

    In former allegations a few articles from a writer, or even accusations
    based entirely on rumor, would be accepted as information. General
    applause for the prosecutors creating these questionable allegations
    started to raise eyebrows and elicit questions from other circles.

    After all, these were like the methods employed under communism during
    the cold war years. Later, these methods continued, in an approach
    seen as being protective of the secular republic and the unity of
    the nation.

    There's no doubt that we were acting with good intentions.

    But this sort of winking at justice brought along with it terrible
    effects on the justice system as a whole.

    Another important point is that we never attached enough importance
    to the education of judges and prosecutors.

    We didn't prepare them for the changing conditions in Turkey and
    in the world at large. We didn't expand their horizons enough. We
    treated them as though they were just any old bureaucrat. We didn't
    compensate them properly for the work they were doing. And now we
    complain. But don't we reap what we sow?

    No matter what happens, if we don't stop meddling in justice, Turkish
    society as a whole will never trust it.

    Ismet Berkan, the general editor of Radikal, also touched on a critical
    point in his column yesterday.

    The case against a group of journalists who criticized a court
    decision to stop the Armenian conference held in Istanbul was dropped
    this week. The journalists, for whom prison sentences of up to 10
    years apiece were being sought, are Hasan Cemal, Ismet Berkan, Haluk
    Sahin and Erol Katircioglu. In addition, the Bagcilar 2nd Criminal
    Court, which was deciding matters in this case, announced that Kemal
    Kerincsiz, a board member of the Legal Union Foundation, would not
    be allowed to interfere in the case from now on.

    Berkan noted: "We always talk about the heavy load on the justice
    system. But this case actually shows why there has been such an
    unnecessary increase in the load." And in truth, there really is a
    completely unnecessary load on the justice system, and it is being
    increased, in fact, by our prosecutors themselves. Saying, "I'm going
    to file a case and let the courts decide," the prosecutors escape all
    responsibility while clogging up the schedule of the courts. Completely
    needless cases are filed against people.

    They are brought before the public clamoring argument, and our image in
    the world abroad is simultaneously ruined. The sensation behind these
    cases grabs everyone's immediate attention, though no one hears when
    the cases are rejected. And thus, the idea that Turkey is a country
    that tries to prevent freedom of thought is the only real lasting
    impression remaining after everything is said and done.

    Prosecutors, get to work.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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