From: Press Agency Ozgurluk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 15 Jan 2001 00:04:11 +0100
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: "[Ozgurluk.Org]" Turkish cops try to silence doctors who treat
torture victims

Turkish cops try to silence doctors who treat torture victims

By SUZAN FRASER
The Associated Press
1/14/01 12:15 PM

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Gynecologist Zeki Uzun says police arrested
him, then beat him for three days and deprived him of sleep after he
treated a suspected Kurdish rebel.

Police sued psychiatrist Ozge Yenier Duman on charges of malpractice
after she insisted that policemen leave her office while she listened to a
prisoner she suspected might have been tortured.

The government fired forensic expert Sebnem Korur Fincanci after she
wrote in a report that police tortured a detainee to death, and she is
under attack again over a similar case.

Turkey's leaders have vowed to crack down on torture, but doctors say
police still intimidate them into not reporting torture, making it virtually
impossible to gather evidence needed to prosecute officers for abuse.

Doctors have also been detained, and in some cases beaten, for treating
victims of torture or refusing to provide information on individuals they
treat. 

Despite a recent decree giving doctors the right to ask police officers to
leave during medical examinations of detainees, most police insist on
staying and watching.

Officers argue they need to be present to protect doctors and to prevent
detainees from escaping. But the Turkish Physicians Association says the
police presence is intimidation meant to ensure abuses are not reported.

Enraged officers have ripped up medical reports, asking doctors to write
less incriminating ones, or even threatened them with death, said
Fincanci, a professor of forensic science.

In response to doctor's complaints, the government enacted legislation in
1999 imposing jail sentences both for physicians who write false reports
to hide torture and for officials who force doctors to write such reports.

Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit contends the government is working to curb
torture. 

"Torture complaints have decreased," he said. "I believe that they will
disappear totally within a short time."

Physicians, however, say most of their colleagues are too scared to report
abuses, and there is little evidence the government campaign is being
taken seriously by police officers.

Doctors "report the marks, but will not conclude that they were caused by
torture," said Fincanci, one of only 16 professors of forensic science in
Turkey. 

A parliamentary commission reported last year on widespread incidents of
torture, providing pictures of rooms soundproofed with black leather,
apparently to muffle the screams of victims.

Sema Piskinsut, a former physician who headed the commission, was then
asked to step down and was replaced by a right-wing legislator from a
party popular with police.

The Turkish Human Rights Foundation, which runs five rehabilitation
centers for torture victims, says police have turned to methods like sleep
deprivation or humiliation, which don't leave physical scars.

"There are no outward signs, but the psychological effect is tremendous,"
Dr. Sukran Irencin said.

Uzun, the gynecologist who works for a center that treats torture
victims, was acquitted last year of charges of aiding Kurdish rebels, a
charge that could have put him in jail for three years. Uzun says he was
beaten in police custody, a claim officials have denied.

A court in November acquitted psychiatrist Duman of charges of
malpractice, but three other doctors are still on trial for insisting police
leave their offices during examinations of detainees. The doctors each
face one-year prison terms if convicted.

Istanbul Gov. Erol Cakir is seeking Fincanci's dismissal from the state-run
Forensic Medicine Institute for writing a report saying union activist
Suleyman Yeter was beaten to death by police. Yeter died two days after
he was arrested. 

Cakir contends Fincanci should be dismissed because she is biased against
police. 

Fincanci, who once worked in Bosnia for the United Nations International
War Crimes Court, was dismissed previously, in 1996, after writing a
report saying a student who died in police custody was tortured to death.

An initial report -- based on an autopsy conducted by a veterinarian --
blamed his death on respiratory problems.

Fincanci was reinstated in 1998.

"The authorities just do not recognize ethics associated with our
profession," said Dr. Umit Erkol, who heads an Ankara-based physicians
group. 

"They do not recognize that relations between patient and doctor are
confidential, that everyone has the right to be treated, even the enemy in
times of war." 

-- 
Press Agency Ozgurluk
In Support of the Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Struggle in Turkey
http://www.ozgurluk.org
DHKC: http://www.ozgurluk.org/dhkc

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