From: Press Agency Ozgurluk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 23:39:20 +0200
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ozgurluk] WP: Turkish women speak out on abuse...

May 21 2001

"The police who did this should be standing here - not me. I am
being victimized for the second time." - NAZLI TOP


LAST JUNE, Top told her story at Turkey's first public
conference on the abuse of women in police custody - an event women's
rights advocates hailed as a milestone in a country in which sexual
violence against women is frequently ignored, covered up or deemed
taboo for public debate.

Six months later, Top and 18 other conference speakers and
organizers were charged with "insulting and raising suspicions
about Turkish security forces." If convicted, each could
receive a six-year prison term."The police who did this
should be standing here - not me," Top told the judge hearing
her case."I am being victimized for the second time." The
prosecutions come during an intensifying struggle over freedom
of expression and individual rights in a country torn between
the march toward integration with the European Union and an
entrenched culture that protects government institutions
from rigorous public scrutiny.


"If this was a democratic country, officials would start investigations
against the police instead of going after the people making the
accusations," Top, a nurse in the research laboratory of a hospital
in suburban Istanbul, said in an interview.

Human rights advocates say Turkey's laws against insulting
or belittling the government are often used to silence
journalists, intellectuals, government opponents and victims
of abuse by police and military forces. European Union
officials evaluating Turkey's membership application have
demanded it abandon or moderate such laws.

Amnesty International
asked Turkish authorities to drop the charges against Top
and her co-defendants "who are guilty only of peacefully
expressing their views." Instead, the government recently
reviewed the speeches made by several of the participants
and filed new charges against five of the women, accusing
them under Turkey's anti-terrorism laws of spreading separatist
propaganda, according to Fatma Karatas, an attorney and one
of the women facing the additional charges.

Those laws, which
cover a broad range of religious and ethnic issues, are among
the most frequently used in freedom of expression cases in
Turkey, Karatas said.Another of the five women targetted
with the additional charges is a 45-year-old Kurdish mother
of five who is suing seven policemen for torture and rape
during 33 days she was detained in 1992 in southeastern
Turkey, where Kurdish separatists led a rebel uprising against
Turkish forces.Advertisement Prosecutors in the cases
against the conference participants did not return several
telephone calls requesting comment on the government's
position. Government authorities traditionally defend the
laws used in this case as necessary to protect the state
from separatist and religious extremist groups."This
conference was the first of its kind," said Nahide Kilic,
an official of Initiative Against Sexual Abuse and Rape in
Custody, an Istanbul-based victim support group that helped
organize the meeting last June. "People came forward and
talked about their experiences to set an example for those
too scared to come forward. Now, with these charges, the
state wants to silence the people."

`STUNNED' BY CHARGES

Participants in the Assembly
Against Sexual Harassment and Rape Under Detention, which was
attended by about 2,000 people, said they were stunned by the
government's charges because the conference had been approved by
the government and most of the victims had revealed details of their
allegations in unsuccessful court cases against the police or in
other official complaints.

Many of the speakers highlighted the court's reluctance to
prosecute members of the security forces accused of raping
or otherwise abusing detainees, especially women.ights
violations are pursued by the authorities and security
officers are prosecuted, only a proportion of them are
eventually convicted. In cases where a conviction occurs,
security officials often receive the lightest possible
sentences."

Amnesty International cited figures it said were obtained from
the Turkish government that show convictions for only 10 of 577
secofficials accused of torture between
1995 and 1999. During the same period, 2,851 investigations into
other forms of alleged ill Top said."Everyone is tortured," the
doctor replied. "Do you have any other complaints?" Top's case
against the police who allegedly detained her dragged on for 2 ½
years until the judge dropped all charges against them, accepting
the prosecutor's explanation that Top had inflicted bruises on
herself and had obtained a fake medical report from the hospital
where she worked.

Top said she decided to addrs the Istanbul conference last
year because, "When I was apprehended, there was no organized
resistance. Now there is, and I'm part of it."

© 2001 The Washington Post Com

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

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