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ANKARA: New Istanbul Police Chief Should Not Make Same Mistakes

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  • ANKARA: New Istanbul Police Chief Should Not Make Same Mistakes

    NEW ISTANBUL POLICE CHIEF SHOULD NOT MAKE SAME MISTAKES

    BIA Magazine
    June 15 2009
    Turkey

    With the transfer of Istanbul's Chief of Police Cerrah to Osmaniye
    province as a governor, it is hoped that his replacement will respect
    human rights more..

    The person to fill the post of Istanbul Chief of Police now that
    Celalettin Cerrah has been given the post of governor of Osmaniye
    province in the south of Turkey, needs to avoid making the same
    mistakes.

    For one, s/he must not make erroneous statements about the human
    rights violations carried out by police officers. This is particularly
    important as a step towards preventing police violence.

    Emma Sinclair, Turkey rapporteur for Human Rights Watch (HRW), wrote
    a report about Turkey last year and shared the data with government
    representatives. She remembers statements on the Istanbul Police
    Force website.

    She said that these statements always denied claims of human rights
    violations by the police in the strongest terms, using hostile
    language. They put forward their own versions of events even while
    investigations were continuing and targeted those making the claims.

    "Thus claims of torture and maltreatment were covered up. Evidence was
    manufactured. In addition the statements about controversial events
    were always produced very fast. The new Chief of Police should not
    repeat this. The police as an institution has to be more careful."

    "Culture of impunity" In an HRW report on police violence published
    in December 2008 , she had written,

    "There are [...] signs of continuing problems of police violence,
    and a reported rise in overall complaints of torture and police
    violence since the beginning of 2007. At the core of the persistence
    of these phenomena is the culture of impunity. Historically, law
    enforcement officials were rarely if ever held to account, and still
    less often in a manner that reflected the gravity of the violations
    committed. Today, despite increased legal safeguards, law enforcement
    officers who flout them can still enjoy effective impunity when they
    are alleged to have abused or even unlawfully killed victims."

    Some have termed the Police Departments website the "Cerrah News
    Agency". Some examples of statements made in the past are:

    When people experienced police violence during forced house
    demolitions, the person recording and broadcasting the violence was
    termed the "provocator of the AltınÅ~_ehir riots."

    When Nigerian refugee Festus (Fastos) Okey was shot dead in the
    Beyoglu police station in central Isatabul, the statement on the
    website tried to conjure up an image of a "potential criminal" in
    order to indirectly legitimise his death.

    When Engin Ceber died in prison and doctor reports and witnesses
    showed that he and his friends had been tortured at the police station,
    Cerrah said, "He was not beaten by us."

    After a police operation in Bostancı, Istanbul, where police officer
    Semih Balaban was shot by militant Orhan Yılmazkaya, and Yılmazkaya
    was later shot, too, Cerrah said at the police officer's funeral:
    "We revenged our friend's death."

    When cars were set on fire in December 2007, Cerrah targeted Kurds in
    his statement, and talked of "perpetrators" rather than "suspects". He
    also advised people to install cameras at home and at work "if they
    want security."

    Following the request of the governor's office, the Istanbul Police
    Force carried the investigation into the police violence used on 1 May
    2008. Not surprisingly, the report found that "proportionate force"
    had been used. The investigation was led by deputy police chief Mehmet
    KızılguneÅ~_, who had been taken off duty as the head of the riot
    police following violence against women protesters on 6 March 2005
    as they were demonstrating for International Women's Day.

    When events of people wearing police uniforms and committing violent
    acts emerged, Cerrah warned the public to ask plain clothes police
    officers for ID. However, he did not mention that all officers,
    whether in uniform or plain clothes, need to show their ID and give
    an explanation when stopping someone and give those who request it
    a report.

    After protesters tried to open a pancard reading "We will not become
    Israeli soldiers" on 30 August 2006, and others attact them, Cerrah
    praised the lynching attempt, saying: "Citizens interfered and showed
    the appropriate reaction. It was a good reaction."

    Hours after the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    in 2007, Istanbul governor Muammer Guler and Cerrah appeared on TV
    together. Cerrah, for whose questioning in the matter the governor
    has never given permission, said, "It was a murder committed with
    nationalist feelings." Although reports have pointed to police
    negligence, he is not facing prosecution. (TK/AG)
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