Brussels, 23 July 2016
To: Ms Federica Mogherini, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy / Vice-President of the Commission
To: Mr Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
Dear HR/VP Federica Mogherini,
Dear Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland,
On Friday 15 July, Turkey experienced an attempted coup, which has resulted in more than 200 victims, mostly civilians, and more than 1400 wounded. Immediately after the failed coup, the Turkish Government started a massive, totally disproportionate purge within the State apparatus. Since the day of the coup, as of 20 July 2016, the total number of purges (suspension from duty and arrests) in public services has totalled more than 61,000 people. The following sectors have been in particular purged: Ministry of Justice (2875 judges and prosecutors), Prime Ministry (257 personnel), Interior Ministry (8,777 police officers, gendarmerie, province governors, local governors and staff), National Education Ministry (21,738 personnel suspended), Higher Education Council (116 professors, including 4 rectors, + 1577 university deans asked to resign), Minister of the Family and Social Policies (393 civil servants), Finance Ministry (1500 personnel), National Intelligence Service (100 personnel), Turkish Energy Regulatory Market (25 personnel). Development Ministry (16 personnel), Ministry of Forestry and Water Management (197 personnel), Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources (300 personnel), Ministry of Youth and Sports (245 personnel), Ministry of Environment and Urbanization (70 personnel), Radio Television Supreme Council (29 personnel), Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency (86 personnel), Ministry of Customs and Trade (176 personnel), Competition Authority (8 personnel), Military Court of Appeals (35 personnel), Defence Ministry (7 personnel), Istanbul Stock Market (51 personnel).
21,000 teaching licences in private institutions have been revoked.
It is likely that academics will come next. Thousands of academics had already been under investigation on grounds that they were “supporting” terrorist activity for having defended the Kurdish populations in South East Turkey, under extensive and lethal attack by Turkish regular forces over the past year.
According to several sources – among them Commissioner for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations Johannes Hahn – the lists of people to arrest were ready before the coup even started. Some of these sources maintain the coup was staged as extrema ratio against these lists.
The Turkish Prime Minister has suspended the annual leave of more than three million civil servants nationwide, and public sector employees are also banned from travelling abroad.
Moreover, following an interview with CNN on 18 July 2016, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has not ruled out the possibility of bringing back the death penalty in Turkey. In the meantime, the state of emergency has been proclaimed by the Government, together with the temporary suspension of the European Convention on Human Rights, as permitted by article 15 of the ECHR. The same article does not imply the disrespect of fundamental principles enshrined in the Convention.
There are no checks and balances left. There are reports that those taken under custody cannot find lawyers, since no one would dare defend them and become part of the purge list.
Turkey is a signatory of the European Convention on Human Rights and of Protocol n. 6 to the ECHR concerning the Abolition of the Death Penalty. As a candidate country for accession to the EU, Turkey has also committed itself to the full observance of the Copenhagen criteria, including stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection of minorities, abolition of capital punishment.
We, the undersigned, condemn any attempt to overturn the democratic order by military coups. At the same time, we condemn the purge undertaken by the Turkish Government in violations of human rights and the rule of law. The principle of independence and impartiality of the judiciary – together with freedom of the media – is at the foundation of the rule of law and democracy. The political independence of the educational profession is essential for free societies.
We call on the HR/VP Federica Mogherini, as well as the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland, to closely monitor the situation in Turkey, as far as the respect for human rights and the rule of law is concerned, and ask for the immediate release of all those arbitrarily arrested and detained in the wake of the failed military coup.
We recall the recent bill adopted by the Turkish Parliament regarding the waiver of immunity from prosecution of several MPs, belonging mostly to the opposition party HDP. All the evidence seems to suggest that the coup represents an opportunity for the Turkish government to further restrict the role of the oppositions and their function of democratic oversight. Shortly after arriving in Istanbul, early Saturday morning, Mr Erdogan said in a statement: “This insurgency is a blessing from Allah, because it will allow us to purge the military” of mutineers.
We call therefore on the HR/VP Mogherini to scrutinise the situation, paying particular attention to the condition of the Kurdish minority and other minorities in the country. We urge as well Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland to remind the Turkish government of its obligation to respect the European Convention on Human Rights and all its protocols, including the right to life, to fair trials, to protection from arbitrary arrests.
We also urge the HR/VP Mogherini to demand the European Council to withdraw immediately the EU-Turkey Agreement, signed on 18 March 2016, in the light of the recent developments. Since the signature of the Agreement, Turkey has not been a “safe country” for refugees and asylum-seekers.
Finally, we request all the EU Member States to fully engage with the Turkish government in order to reinstate completely the rule of law and the democratic principles in the country as a basic condition for future diplomatic relationships and the continuation of the accession negotiations.
Best regards,
Barbara Spinelli – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Albena Azmanova – Associate Professor of Political and Social Thought. Director, postgraduate programmes Political Strategy and Communication and International Political Economy University of Kent, Brussels School of International Studies
Étienne Balibar – Professor Emeritus (philosophy), University of Paris-Ouest, Anniversary Chair in Modern European Philosophy, Kingston University London
Seyla Benhabib – Eugene Mayer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University
Sophie Bessis – Historian, Tunisia-France
Hamit Bozarslan – Historian and political scientist, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris
Susan Buck-Morss – Political Philosopher, CUNY Graduate Center, NYC
Judith Butler – Maxine Elliot Professor of Comparative Literature and Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley
Claude Calame – Historian and anthropologist, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris
Joseph H. Carens – FRSC Professor of Political Science University of Toronto
Maeve Cooke – Member of the Royal Irish Academy, Professor of Philosophy, University College Dublin
Vincent Duclert – Historian at Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales, France
Didier Fassin – Professor of social sciences, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
Éric Fassin – Professor of sociology, Paris-8 University
Shelley Feldman – International Professor, Cornell University
Peter Geschiere – Emeritus professor of anthropology, University of Amsterdam and Leiden University, NL
Michael Hardt – Professor, Duke University, USA
David Harvey – Distinguished Professor, Graduate Center of the City University of New York
Marianne Hirsch – William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and Director of the Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality
Philip Hogh – Philosophy Department, Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg
Jean E. Howard – George Delacorte Professor in the Humanities, Department of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
Julia Koenig – Institute for Social Pedagogy and Adult Education, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main
Elena Loizidou – Reader in Law and Political Theory at School of Law, Birkbeck, University of London
Sandro Mezzadra – Professor of political theory at the University of Bologna
Jennifer Nedelsky – Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Toronto
Rosalind Petchesky – Distinguished Professor Emerita of Political Science Hunter College & the Graduate Center, City University of New York
Ilaria Possenti – Research fellow in political philosophy, University of Verona, Italy
Mary Louise Pratt – Silver Professor, Professor Emerita of Social and Cultural Analysis, Spanish & Portuguese, Comparative Literature, New York University
Lynne Segal – Anniversary Professor, Psychosocial Studies, Birkbeck College, University of London
Vicky Skoumbi – Editor in chief of the Greek Journal αληthεια
Céline Spector – Professor at the Department of Philosophy of the Université Bordeaux Montaigne, honorary member of the Institut Universitaire de France
Yanis Varoufakis – Professor of Economic Theory at the University of Athens, former Finance Minister and Member of Parliament, Greece
Frieder Otto Wolf – Freie Universität Berlin, Former Member of the European Parliament
Vladimiro Zagrebelsky – Former Judge of the European Court of Human Rights
François Alfonsi – President of the European Free Alliance (EFA)
Brando Benifei – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
José Bové – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Nicola Caputo – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Fabio Massimo Castaldo – Member of the European Parliament, EFDD Group-M5S
Fabio De Masi – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Karima Delli – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Pascal Durand – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
José Inácio Faria – Member of the European Parliament, ALDE Group
Eleonora Forenza – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
María Teresa Giménez Barbat – Member of the European Parliament, ALDE Group
Ana Maria Gomes – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Tania González Peñas – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Yannick Jadot – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Benedek Jávor – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Eva Joly – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Josu Juaristi Abaunz – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Jude Kirton-Darling – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Stelios Kouloglou – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Merja Kyllönen – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Patrick Le Hyaric – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Paloma López Bermejo – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Lorena Lopez de Lacalle – Treasurer of the European Free Alliance (EFA)
Marisa Matias – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Stefano Maullu – Member of the European Parliament, EPP Group
Marlene Mizzi – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Ulrike Müller – Member of the European Parliament, ALDE Group
Javier Nart – Member of the European Parliament, ALDE Group
Carolina Punset – Member of the European Parliament, ALDE Group
Michèle Rivasi – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Sofia Sakorafa – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Elly Schlein – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Helmut Scholz – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Branislav Škripek – Member of the European Parliament, ECR Group
Jordi Sole – Secretary General of the European Free Alliance (EFA)
Bart Staes – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Dario Tamburrano – Member of the European Parliament, EFDD Group-M5S
Miguel Urbán Crespo – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Pello Urizar – Secretary General of Eusko Alkartasuna (Basque political party)
Ernest Urtasun – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Monika Vana – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
Marie-Christine Vergiat – Member of the European Parliament, GUE/NGL Group
Julie Ward – Member of the European Parliament, S&D Group
Tatjana Ždanoka – Member of the European Parliament, Greens/EFA Group
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