* Photo: Utku Uçrak / Anadolu Agency (AA)
Click to read the article in Turkish
Bringing 294 non-governmental organizations under its umbrella, the Checks and Balances Network has prepared a report documenting the state of the judicial system in Turkey since April 16, 2017, when the Presidential Government System was adopted in Turkey in a referendum.
The report entitled "Presidential System Ahead of 2021: Judiciary" has shown that after the new system was adopted in Turkey, the influence of the executive on the judiciary has increased in the country.
According to the report, while the judicial reform packages passed by the Parliament over the years led to partial improvements, they have not remedied fundamental problems such as the uncertainty about the long periods of detention or the ineffective investigation processes.
The report of the network has also noted that the failure of the local courts, influenced by the political statements, to abide by the judgements handed down by the higher courts, especially the ones by the Constitutional Court, has impaired the hierarchy of norms.
"As a result of all these factors, the trust in the judiciary has decreased in all segments of society, regardless of their political views," the report has indicated, underlining that "the issue of trust in the judicial system has become an above-party problem" within this context.
Accordingly, the NGOs have called on the related authorities to introduce legal arrangements that will guarantee judicial independence and impartiality, increase meritocracy and competence in the judiciary and to ensure that fundamental rights and freedoms are protected, especially the right to a fair trial and the right to an effective defense.
Turkey is going downhill in rule of law
The report of the network covering the period from April 16, 2017 till today has specifically analyzed what kind of changes have taken place in the judicial system in Turkey since then and what kind of consequences those changes and amendments have led to in terms of checks and balances.
Noting that there are problems in four main areas in the judicial system of Turkey, the report has listed these areas as follows: "The rule of law, judicial independence and impartiality; meritocracy and effectiveness in the judiciary; periods of detention in terms of fundamental rights and freedoms, right to a fair trial and defense; trust in the judicial system."
Accordingly, it has been further underlined in the report that this problematic situation in Turkey in terms of the rule of law has also been reflected in the internationally prestigious indexes, suggesting that the rule of law has been going downhill in the country since then.
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Regarding the defiance of the local courts to abide by the judgements of the higher courts, the report has further commented,
"When some previously investigated politicians who had been acquitted by the Constitutional Court were detained again as part of the same investigation, it has not only kept on undermining the trust in the judiciary in the eye of society, but it has also harmed the principles of judicial independence and political impartiality, thereby creating the impression that the judicial power has been politically instrumentalized." (HA/SD)
Click here to read the full report (in Turkish)