ISTANBUL (Reuters) — Late one night in early February, Ibrahim Kaboglu learned
that he had been targeted in the sweeping crackdown that followed Turkey’s failed coup a year ago.
“Sir, you are in the decree,” a colleague told the 67-year-old constitutional law professor by phone, referring to a list of 4,000 employees suspended from their jobs in a single swoop.
Five months later, as Turkey’s government prepares to commemorate thwarting the attempted overthrow of President Tayyip Erdogan, Kaboglu is still barred from his job at Marmara University and a yearlong purge continues — hitting the judiciary particularly hard.
A quarter of judges and prosecutors have been sacked, leaving under-resourced courts swamped with tens of thousands of cases against people targeted in the crackdown, and weakening a pillar of constitutional authority in Turkey.
Kaboglu was half-expecting the call, he said, and he chose to carry on working into the night rather than wake up his wife and daughter. But the sense of inevitability could not soften the blow.
“For a jurist who has reached the last stage of his professional career, to be included in a ... decree prepared in an anticonstitutional way, has an impact that is worse than death,” he said. “Because your whole life has passed in a struggle for the law.”
Around 50,000 people have been jailed pending trial and 150,000 people like Kaboglu suspended from work since the failed July 15, 2016 putsch, when rogue soldiers commandeered warplanes, tanks and helicopters, attacked parliament and tried to abduct Erdogan, killing 250 people.
The president’s ruling AK Party says the coup was planned by supporters of U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen deeply embedded in Turkey’s institutions — the army, schools and courts — and only a massive purge could neutralise the threat.
But for those targeted in the crackdown the effect has been devastating. Stripped either of their liberty or their livelihood, they have little prospect of employment.
“You are deprived of all your rights. They say you cannot work [in Turkey] ... You cannot work abroad either. My pension rights were taken away,” Kaboglu told Reuters.
The wider impact on the judiciary has been an erosion of legal safeguards, Kaboglu and other critics say, accusing Erdogan of using last year’s attempted coup as an excuse to trample on constitutional rights.
Turkey’s main opposition leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, echoed that charge at a rally in Istanbul on Sunday, the biggest protest yet against the crackdown, when he described the state of emergency imposed last July as a second coup.
“All powers of the legislature, judiciary and executive have been concentrated in one person,” Kilicdaroglu told protesters.
“The independence and impartiality of the judiciary, which underpins democracy and the protection of all rights to life and property, must be ensured,” he said.
The crackdown, and a bitterly fought April referendum which granted greater presidential powers to Erdogan, have strained Turkey’s ties with the European Union and put its decades-old ambition to join the bloc in limbo.
Turkey’s justice ministry says “procedures” have been launched against 169,000 people. Some had used a messaging app favoured by Gulen’s network, others worked at schools founded by his supporters or held accounts at a Gulen-linked bank.
Even ownership of one-dollar bills has been enough to raise suspicion. Authorities believe Gulen supporters, labelled the Gulenist Terrorist Organisation (FETO) by the government, used the notes to identify fellow members.
Arrested soldiers have been paraded in court in front of television cameras, crowds throwing nooses at them in a call to reinstate the death penalty for the coup plotters. Other detainees wait to learn their fate.
“They penetrated everywhere,” Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus told Reuters, adding that eliminating the influence of Gulen, a former ally of Erdogan as he built up his power base, would take years.
“We are talking about a structure [going back] more than 40 years, hence it is not possible to cleanse it in one day,” Kurtulmus said.
Acknowledging that mistakes could be made in a wide-ranging purge, he said 33,000 people had been restored to their posts. People wrongly caught up could also apply to a commission which is starting to operate.
“This is a process that will continue for a long time. We have to continue very decisively,” he said, adding that this weekend’s commemoration of the failed coup would strengthen Turkey’s resolve to continue to confront those behind the coup.Speech
Clip to Evernote
inShare
Related
Trump: French first lady is in ‘such good shape’
Russian-American lobbyist joined Trump Jr.’s meeting
Trump urges Republicans to pass bill on health care
Macron vows to keep fighting terror 1 year after Nice attack
More from The Japan News
JPMorgan CEO shifts topic to politics
JPMorgan CEO shifts topic to politics
Jul 15, 2017
BOUND TO PLEASE / A cultural emigrant in modern America
BOUND TO PLEASE / A cultural emigrant in modern America
Jul 08, 2017
China media: Liu ‘led astray by West’ Jul 15, 2017
English for Global Marketing / Performance Mix Jul 11, 2017
Automakers call on China to soften electric car quotas Jul 14, 2017
Recommended by
Sponsored Contents
Scratching This Part of Your Body is a Sign of Alzheimer's
Scratching This Part of Your Body is a Sign of Alzheimer's
(memoryrepairprotocol.com)
The Reading Habits Of Highly Successful People
The Reading Habits Of Highly Successful People
(Blinkist Magazine)
This Is Why Doctors No Longer Prescribe Metformin (WATCH)
This Is Why Doctors No Longer Prescribe Metformin (WATCH)
(healthnewstips.today)
Where the World's Billionaires Live
Where the World's Billionaires Live
(Mansion Global by Dow Jones)
Hillary Clinton Buys House Next Door To Her Chappaqua Home
Hillary Clinton Buys House Next Door To Her Chappaqua Home
(Mansion Global)
Meet The App That Revolutionized Book Reading For 1.5 Million People
Meet The App That Revolutionized Book Reading For 1.5 Million People
(Blinkist Magazine)
Recommended by
SUBSCRIBE NEWSPAPER
購読申し込みはこちら
PRLatest news from Sophia University
Unprecedented rainfall in northern Kyushu
Donald Trump next U.S. president North Korea
My Japanology
Olympic and Paralympic news
Delicious & Detours in Japan Free 1-week trial now available! The Japan News LITE
Weather
Tokyo 06:00 am
Customize
Cloudy
26.1°C
Mon
Cloudy
34.2°
25.2°
Tue
Cloudy
33°
25°
Wed
Sunny
32°
25°
Thu
Sunny
33°
25°
Market Data
Exchange Rates
¥ ⁄ $112.53 - 114.53 Jul.14 10:28
¥ ⁄ €127.89 - 130.89 Jul.14 10:28
Consumer rates provided by the Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ
Topix Close
1625.48 6.37 Jul.14 15:02
See the history of
WASEDA University
As it is today
Capturing the age,
focusing on the future
Chuo University
Latest news from Sophia University,
a pioneer in Japanese
global education
Advertising with The Japan News
Premium
Bound to Please Troubleshooter
Cycle Road Race Living & Learning
More! - Fun features, deep data
KODOMO新聞 読売中高生新聞 中学受験サポート
Introducing Yomidas Rekishikan
SCROLL TO TOP
WEB SITE POLICIES
Web Site Policies Top
Privacy Policy Statement
Copyrights
Linking Policy
Contact us
MEDIA DATA
The Yomiuri Shimbun
The Japan News
Advertising with The Japan News Website
ABOUT US
SUBSCRIBE NEWSPAPER
CONNECT
Facebook
Twitter (English)
Twitter (Japanese)
Twitter (TheJapanNews Editor)
Links
The Japan News Partners
Waseda Online
Chuo Online
Nippon TV
YTV
ANN
YOMIURI College of Tokyo
YOMIURI COLLEGE OF CAR MECHANIC