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Turkey's rights record under fire at UN

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  • Turkey's rights record under fire at UN

    Agence France Presse
    January 27, 2015 Tuesday 4:38 PM GMT

    Turkey's rights record under fire at UN

    Geneva, Jan 27 2015


    Turkey faced harsh criticism Tuesday at a United Nations review of its
    rights record, with diplomats condemning intimidation of journalists
    and brutal police crackdowns on demonstrators.

    "We are concerned about growing restrictions on freedom of expression,
    including censorship of new media and the Internet, and provisions of
    Turkish law that unduly limit peaceful assembly," US representative
    Keith Harper told the UN Human Rights Council.

    His comments came during a so-called Universal Periodic Review of
    Turkey's rights record -- something all 193 UN countries must undergo
    every four years.

    But Turkey hit back, insisting it had made great strides in human
    rights and that freedom of expression and assembly were
    "indispensible" parts of the country's democratic order.

    "The protection and promotion of human rights is one of our priority
    political objectives," Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Buelent Arinc
    told the council.

    While acknowledging there were some journalists in Turkish prisons, he
    insisted their detention was "not related to their journalistic
    activities."

    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government has sacked thousands of
    police and scores of judges and pushed through legislation tightening
    state control over the Internet and the judiciary, raising questions
    at home and abroad about the state of democracy in Turkey.

    Egypt was especially harsh in its criticism, with representative Amr
    Ramadan lamenting a "severe deterioration in the human rights
    situation in Turkey," and slamming Ankara for deadly crackdowns on
    demonstrators and jailing journalists.

    "We would have wished to have seen such criticism coming from parties
    who adhere to the same universal values as we do," Arinc fired back at
    Egypt, which itself has jailed numerous journalists and seen many
    protestors killed in clashes with security forces.

    However, Egypt's criticism was echoed by a large number of the 122
    diplomats to take the floor Tuesday.

    Harper, the US representative, pointed to "government interference in
    the judiciary and law enforcement sectors," including efforts to
    reorganise the courts, warning that this "undermines the rule of law."

    British representative Karen Pierce expressed concern over
    "restrictions on the freedoms of assembly and expression, and the
    separation of powers," urging Ankara to "ensure judicial reforms are
    implemented in line with international standards."

    Others criticised Turkey for discriminating against minorities.

    Armenia's representative Vahram Kazhoyan said Ankara should return
    "the confiscated properties of Armenians and other religious
    minorities, such as places of worship, including monasteries, church
    properties and religious and cultural sites."

    He also called for Turkey to "fully implement the international
    obligations emanating from the UN Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of the Crime of Genocide."

    Armenians say the Ottoman state conducted genocide against them during
    World War I repressions that left an estimated 1.5 million people
    dead. But modern Turkey has always vehemently resisted terming the
    mass killings as genocide.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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