http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=197772

June 28, 2009 

 
Turkey passes law limiting military courts





ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey's parliament has passed legislation aimed at 
meeting European Union membership criteria to ensure military personnel are 
tried in civilian courts during peacetime rather than in military courts. 


The legislation passed on Friday requires civilian courts to try members of the 
armed forces who are accused of crimes including threats to national security, 
constitutional violations, organizing armed groups and attempts to topple the 
government, according to parliament's website. 

The legislation comes amid renewed tensions between the powerful military and 
the government after a newspaper published a document this month that allegedly 
outlined an army plot to undermine the ruling AK Party, which traces its roots 
to an outlawed Islamist movement. 

Chief of the Military General Staff Ilker Basbug on Friday said the document 
was a smear campaign against the armed forces. A military prosecutor ruled this 
week there was insufficient evidence for an investigation, but Prime Minister 
Tayyip Erdogan has vowed that civilian prosecutors will now take over the 
probe. Ending the military's influence in politics is a key step the EU expects 
Turkey to take to advance its membership bid. 

The change to the penal code also says civilians cannot be tried in military 
courts unless the country is in a state of martial law or at war. 

It was not clear if the changes to the penal code will affect the trial of 
military officers who have been charged in the so-called Ergenekon case 
investigating an alleged right-wing network that sought to topple the 
government. 

Erdogan and the military have repeatedly faced off during the government's 
six-year rule over the AK Party's efforts to ease restrictions on religion in 
Turkey. The country's generals are the self-proclaimed guardians of Turkish 
secularism and have forced four governments from power since 1960. 

Photo: 

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks to the media in Ankara, 
Turkey, May 1, 2009. (AP Photo


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke