From: press Agency Ozgurluk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 12 May 2001 15:07:28 +0200
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ozgurluk] HRW: Isolation in Turkish prisons continues


Isolation in Turkish Prisons Continues
Justice Ministry Fails to Implement New Amendment

(New York, May 11, 2001) Recent changes in Turkey's Anti-Terror Law
have not ended the isolation regime in Turkey's new prisons, Human
Rights Watch said today. An amendment to the Anti-Terror Law adopted
May 1 was supposed to allow prisoners charged under that law more
time out of their cells, but instead the four-month-old lockdown
continues.

A Justice Ministry spokesperson this week refused to answer Human
Rights Watch's inquiry as to how the new law was being implemented
and how many prisoners had been allowed out of their cells.

"It's been ten days now since the amendment's been adopted," said
Jonathan Sugden, Human Rights Watch researcher on Turkey. "Every
day that passes without a single prisoner emerging from isolation
is a terrible disappointment. The Justice Ministry must stop this
crisis and get its prisoners out of isolation now."

The 1991 Anti-Terror Law required that inmates be held permanently
in one- or three- person cells with no contact with other prisoners.
This provision was ignored until December 2000, when thousands of
soldiers entered prisons to move inmates to newly constructed F-type
prisons. The transfer operation resulted in the deaths of thirty
prisoners and two soldiers.

The May 1 amendment to the Anti-Terror Law removed legal obstacles
to allowing prisoners out of their cells during the day for education,
training, and sport. But lawyers and prisoners' relatives have told
Human Rights Watch that the lockdown in F-type prisons persists.
To Human Rights Watch's knowledge, no prisoners in any of the four
existing F-type prisons have been permitted out of their units since
the amendment's adoption. The Justice Ministry's reticence appears
to confirm this.

In the ten days since amendment was adopted, two more hunger-striking
prisoners have died. The prisoners have been striking since October
2000, in protest against the isolation policy in the new prisons.
To date, eighteen prisoners and four relatives have died. The Turkish
government has tried to maintain a media blackout on the crisis.
On April 27 the Istanbul-based Voice of Anatolia radio station was
shut down for three months because it had broadcast a program on
the prison crisis. The Council of Europe's Committee for the
Prevention of Torture (CPT) has repeatedly called for an end to
small-group isolation in F-type prisons. In two weeks, the Council
of Europe, of which Turkey is a member, will be discussing the CPT's
annual report for 2000 at a meeting in Istanbul.

"We hope that the Council of Europe will be doing all it can to
break the deadlock before its arrival in Turkey," said Sugden.
"While the Justice Ministry defies the Committee for the Prevention
of Torture's recommendations, prisoners are being ill-treated in
isolation."

Small group isolation is physically and psychologically damaging,
but is also making prisoners more vulnerable to ill-treatment. Staff
has reportedly beaten prisoners for failing to present themselves
for roll call and for shouting slogans during cell searches. On
April 23, guards beat Yunus �zg�r, on hunger strike since his
transfer to Sincan F-type Prison, when he was unable to rise to his
feet for roll call, according to his father. He was subsequently
hospitalized for several days, apparently for injuries resulting
from the beating, and has now been returned to Sincan Prison.

The amendment, the result of pressure from domestic and international
human rights organizations, makes access to out-of-cell activities
conditional on prison resources and security considerations.

Lawyers and prisoners' relatives fear that prison administrators
intent on keeping prisoners locked down will manipulate this loophole.
The CPT has said that the vast majority of F-type prisoners does
not present a security risk and should not be left indefinitely in
their cells.

In past months, the Justice Ministry had stated repeatedly that
prisoners would be allowed out-of-cell activities even before the
adoption of the legal reform measure, but did not live up to this
commitment.  Since January, Human Rights Watch has urged that, in
view of the crisis, any F-type prison lacking sufficient resources
for immediate implementation of out-of-cell programs should, as an
interim measure, permitprisoners on the same corridor to associate
by opening cell doors during daylight hours.

Human Rights Watch first addressed the these issues with the Turkish
government in a July 1999 memorandum warning that the planned regime
of small group isolation might amoun and degrading treatment, and
would expose prisoners to an increased risk of ill-treatment or
torture.

For more information about Human Rights Watch'ng to the F-type
prisons, see: www.hrw.org/campaigns/turkey/prison/

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


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