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The Constitutional Court on Friday (August 12) rejected an application for the release of the Kurdish politician, Aysel Tuğluk, who has been diagnosed with dementia.
Instead, the court issued an injunction order for the "necessary measures for the protection of the life and material and spiritual integrity of the applicant."
Tuğluk's treatment should continue, she should be regularly examined in neurology and psychology clinics, and whether she should be released due to her condition should be periodically examined, the court ruled.
The court's decision was a "confession" that it was clear that Tuğluk's condition will get worse, her attorneys said in a written statement following the judgment.
"It seems that while the Constitutional Court could no longer ignore many documents in the file showing the stage of Ms. Tuğluk's health condition and admitted that she wll not be able to live on her own, it avoided giving the ruling necessitated by the deep-rooted jurisprudence of human rights mechanisms."
Tuğluk will be examined by the Forensic Medicine Institution (ATK) in the coming days, the lawyers noted, saying, "our expectation is the preparation of a report with the objectivity necessitated by science, law and conscience."
Aysel Tuğluk's trial and imprisonmentOn December 29, 2016, when she was the Vice Co-Chair of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), Kurdish politician Aysel Tuğluk was arrested along with seven other politicians from the Democratic Regions Party (DBP) and the Democratic Society Congress (DTK). The indictment filed against Tuğluk, who was the DTK Co-Chair till September 2014, brought her statements to the press as well as the funerals that she attended as criminal evidence against the politician. On March 16, 2018, the Ankara 17th Heavy Penal Court sentenced Aysel Tuğluk to 8 years in prison as per the Anti-Terror Law (TMK) no. 3713. Increasing this prison term by half, the court then gave a 12-year prison sentence to the politician. Lastly, it has decreased this prison sentence by one sixth and ruled that she shall be sentenced to 10 years in prison. As Aysel Tuğluk's appeal to the Ankara Regional Court of Justice was rejected, her file was sent to the Court of Cassation. Her mother's funeralAysel Tuğluk's mother Hatun Tuğluk lost her life in 2017. Upon her last will, her deceased body was brought to the İncek Cemetery in Ankara. Aysel Tuğluk left prison by permission and her mother was laid to rest; shortly afterwards, a group of 5-6 people gathered to protest the funeral. The ones who attended the funeral said that this number gradually increased and they tried to attack the grave. As the attacks continued, the deceased body of Hatun Tuğluk had to be removed from the ground and laid to rest somewhere else. One of the people who attacked the funeral turned out to have a picture with Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu at the police station. Health problemsAysel Tuğluk's elder brother Alaattin Tuğluk said that his sister had a memory loss after their mother's passing: My sister didn't look fine. She asks the same question 3-4 times. She doesn't remember some things. For instance, when she wants to ask about someone from the family, she says, 'Who was that, who?' They are close people, it is impossible for her to not know them. I am concerned that this will come to an irreversible point and that we will lose my sister... I want treatment before it is too late. Let another committee examine her and give a decision accordingly. She is given 1-2 medications now. It is not enough. She will go [to jail] after her treatment ends. About Aysel TuğlukPolitician and lawyer. She was the founding member and Co-Chair of the Democratic Society Party (DTP) and elected Diyarbakır MP in 2007-2009. She became the Van MP of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) in 2011-2015. She served as the Vice Co-Chair of the HDP responsible for Law and Human Rights. Aysel Tuğluk was also a member of the Society and Law Studies Foundation Executive Board, a member of the Human Rights Association (İHD) and the founder of the Patriotic Women's Association. Born in Elazığ in 1965, she graduated from the Faculty of Law of İstanbul University and worked as a self-employed lawyer. |
(VK)