Amnesty International: Authorities must investigate violations on journalists

  • actual
  • 14:02 31 December 2024
  • |
img

NEWS CENTER - Amnesty International reminded the killing of journalists Cihan Bilgin and Nazım Daştan in an airstrike. "Authorities must investigate the allegations of human rights violations and other actions of the law enforcement officials on journalists and other protesters" the statement reads.

Amnesty International made a statement on rights violations against different segments of society, especially journalists. The statement, entitled "Türkiye: Stop the crackdown on peaceful dissent", said that the crackdown on lawyers, journalists and protesters falls within the scope of abuse of the justice system to intimidate, harass and silence peaceful dissent.
 
MURDER OF TWO JOURNALISTS 
 
The statement pointed to the killing of journalists Cihan Bilgin and Nazım Daştan in an air strike.
 
The statement reads: "Amnesty International is deeply concerned at the crackdown on the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly in Türkiye following the reports of a drone strike attack resulting in the killing of Cihan Bilgin and Nazım Daştan, two Kurdish journalists from Türkiye in north-east Syria on 19 December.
 
Since the killings, protests have been banned, participants detained and criminal investigations launched against those who have expressed their opinions in statements and on social media. On 20 December, law enforcement officials prevented protesters from gathering and at least 55 people, including 10 journalists, were detained in the eastern province but later released the same day. On 21 December, riot police detained 59 people during protests in Istanbul, of whom nine people including seven journalists were remanded in pre-trial detention.
 
'Criminal investigations against the Istanbul Bar Association and other groups and individuals were reportedly opened because of their statements and social media posts calling for an investigation into the reported killings and the release of the detained individuals.
 
The crackdown against lawyers, journalists and protesters amounts to a misuse of the criminal justice system to intimidate, harass and silence peaceful dissent and as such, is in violation of Türkiye's obligations under international human rights law.
 
Turkish authorities must immediately release all those detained solely for the peaceful exercise of their human rights. Authorities must promptly, thoroughly, independently, impartially, transparently and effectively investigate the allegations of human rights violations and other actions of the law enforcement officials on journalists and other protesters and bring to justice in fair trials those suspected to be responsible, as well as ensure access to justice and effective remedies for victims.
 
The authorities must uphold the human rights of everyone in the country including by immediately ending the arbitrary detention and prosecution of journalists and others solely for peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly. Authorities must stop weaponizing the criminal justice system against the Istanbul Bar
 
Association and others simply for exercising their rights and discharging their professional duties and immediately drop the ongoing criminal investigations launched against them.
 
ARBITRARY DETENTIONS AND ABUSIVE CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS 
 
On 21 December at around 1.30pm, hundreds of riot police prevented journalists and others from reading out a press statement in Istanbul, based on the Beyoğlu district governor’s banning decision of the protest, which was not shown to the protestors but later obtained by Amnesty International observers following their request to see it from the law enforcement officials.
 
Amnesty International observers present saw around 100 law enforcement officers in riot gear surrounding a dozen people gathered for the protest before they could begin their press statement, while dozens of other officers were stationed around the Şişhane square.  Police made three loudspeaker announcements in quick successions, stating the gathering was banned by the district governorate and that they would intervene if the group didn’t disperse, while containing them. However, the police did not allow the group to disperse, or any individuals to leave the containment
 
Over the course of the afternoon, 59 people including many journalists were detained from three separate points in Şişhane square, according to lawyers’ associations who represented the detained individuals. The second two police interventions were to prevent other small groups of people from protesting the earlier initial detentions. The vast majority of the detained individuals were released from police detention on the same evening while the prosecutor referred 14 people to the Istanbul Judgeship of Peace No 3, requesting they be remanded in pre-trial detention. 
 
Amnesty International is concerned that the banning order exceeded the lawfully allowed restrictions on the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, alleging the call by the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association for the gathering in Şişhane square would take place with the ‘sponsorship’ of an armed group, without any evidence. While international law provides for restrictions to be introduced to public assemblies, these must be aimed at protecting a legitimate public interest, be necessary and proportionate, meaning that the same result cannot be achieved through other less restrictive means, to ensure the exercise of rights are not unduly restricted. The Beyoğlu district governor’s banning decision that the protest, which was called by the Dicle Fırat Journalists Association, a lawfully established organization, would be attended by people connected to the armed group was neither necessary nor proportionate.
 
Law enforcement officials used excessive force against the people in the context of their detention that could amount to ill treatment, including being handcuffed in cable ties on their back, while a few had their faces roughly pressed on the side of the detention bus.
Some journalists who were released from police custody later reported that they had been threatened with ‘yellow bags’ on the police bus, alluding to the body bags used by the state to return killed members of the armed group to their families. 
 
Lawyers who visited the three detained women journalists stated they had made allegations of ill-treatment including strip search. On Sunday 22 December, nine individuals including seven journalists were remanded in pre-trial detention for allegedly ‘making propaganda for a terrorist organization’ because they displayed the photos of the two journalists killed in northeast Syria. Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor launched a criminal investigation against the Istanbul Bar Association for their statement on 21 December, calling for an investigation into the killing of the two journalists in Syria and the release of the nine detained protesters in İstanbul for ‘propaganda for a terrorist organization’ and ‘spreading misinformation’. 
 
Istanbul Bar Association publicly rejected the allegations and received widespread support from bar associations around the country. Online news site T24 is also facing criminal investigation for its news report about the statements made by DISK Basın-İş and Dicle Fırat Journalists Association regarding the killing of two journalists in Syria. The journalist and Gerçek Gündem Editor-in-Chief, Seyhan Avşar is also reportedly under criminal investigation for her social media posts about the two journalists killed in north-east Syria.
 
The killing of two Kurdish journalists in north-east Syria also sparked protests in other provinces across the country, including in Diyarbakır, Ankara and Mersin and near the Syrian border. Speaking to Amnesty International, journalists associations stated that in Ankara, protestors were allowed to gather on the understanding that they would not assign responsibility to the Turkish state for the drone killings. In Diyarbakır, the gathered crowd was prevented from marching but were allowed to read out the press statement. Protestors didn’t face any restrictions in the Mersin province and near the Syrian border." 

View More Articles

24/10/2025
17:19 Intubated journalist Aykol to continue to be put to sleep
15:35 The state must ensure Mr Öcalan's freedom says Saliha Aydeniz
14:30 'Girls' secondary schools' reaction: Interference in lifestyle
13:35 Refugee boat sank in Mugla: 14 dead
08:38 Attempt to occupy Kurdish farmers' land in Kirkuk
08:32 Resistance of 223 workers continue: Wan defends labour, says no to kayyum
23/10/2025
16:57 Dormitory and university investigations to be seperated in Rojin Kabaiş case
16:50 Journalist Aykol's life still in danger
16:34 Banned Abdullah Öcalan interview published 28 years later
16:33 HPG announces operations in Amed and Besta
16:22 Koma Amed members welcomed in Amed
15:07 If Turkey chooses war, it is in no one's interest says Academician Berwari
10:23 'All prisoners must be released if a lasting peace is desired'
09:38 'Kurdish publishing should be supported more strongly against assimilation'
22/10/2025
15:27 Soldiers seize citizen’s phone after filming deforestation in Gabar
15:18 Journalist Aykol's life still in danger
13:20 If the state wants peace it must meet Ocalan says Lawyer Ozer
11:10 ‘Oppression continues in prisons despite process’
10:32 Release of 8 prisoners prevented: No release in Kırşehir S-Type
10:23 Villages in Agirî punished for not voting ruling party
21/10/2025
15:48 Journalist Aykol's sleep medication reduced again
15:25 Transitional government closes Tebqa-Salemiya road
13:55 Turkey building new roads and bases, preparing for war says CPT Iraq representative
10:18 He said, ‘a person can’t regret what they didn’t do’, his release delayed by 6 months
20/10/2025
16:47 Delegation from Iraq and the Kurdistan Region in Tehran
15:34 Journalist Aykol to be put back into induced coma
14:43 Syrian forces attacked Sheikhmaqsud
13:08 Damascus forces attack on Suwayda
11:10 Only demand of the Peace Mothers is the physical freedom of Ocalan
10:08 Judiciary must make rulings that strengthen social peace says IHD member
09:41 Turkey must change its stance toward Syria’s Kurds says Cengiz Candar
09:34 ‘The real solution is to remove the barriers before the Kurdish language’
19/10/2025
16:38 Intubated journalist Aykol in stable condition
16:02 Great interest in Abdullah Öcalan's Sociology of Freedom in Argentina
15:16 DEM Party Co-Chairs: Implementing ECHR rulings is a key step toward peace
13:33 'The solution of the problems depends on freedom of Abdullah Öcalan'
13:10 Prisoner whose release prevented for the 3rd time: They are waiting for me to die
12:26 Classmates of Rojin Kabaiş ask: Why is the Rector hiding?
10:21 Two-thirds of villages in Agirî had renamed under assimilation policies
09:51 Youth march for Abdullah Öcalan: We will struggle without ınterruption until he is free
09:47 Call for rally in Esenyurt
18/10/2025
15:07 Call for Kurdish Language: The mother-tongue struggle is a social responsibility
14:57 Message from Abdullah Öcalan to the Peace Mothers
14:49 ‘The road to lasting peace passes through prisons’
17/10/2025
14:08 Journalist Aykol is expected to be woken up during the day
12:38 Abdullah Ocalan: The right to hope is a step that the state must take
11:56 While 'solution' being discussed, the government building 'security roads'
10:26 Doctor who joined Rojin Kabais’s autopsy: Deficiencies in the investigation have complicated the process
09:23 Why does the Committee enforced ECHR ruling on Azerbaijan avoid acting against Turkey?
15/10/2025
13:47 Ahmet Türk: The state must act in line with the spirit of the process”