|
|
TK12718-160608 War
Resisters' International, London, 16 June 2008
co-alert TURKEY: Conscientious objector Mehmet Bal beaten in prison |
|
Turkish
conscientious objector Mehmet Bal, who was arrested by plain clothes
police on
8 June 2008, has been severely beaten in prison. According to
reports from his lawyers, who visited him 11 June in prison, during
Mehmet Bal's first day at Hasdal Military prison a senior officer took
him into a prison ward and ordered other prisoners to "do what is
necessary to remind him of prison rules". Five or six prisoners beat his
face and body with a plank of wood. At some stage Mehmet Bal passed out
from the beatings, and was taken to a cold shower so that he would
regain consciousness and the beating continued. After the attack, Mehmet
Bal was taken to Gumussuyu Military Hospital for treatment. Although he
could not move his neck, legs and arms, he was not admitted to the
hospital, and taken back to the prison on a stretcher. This treatment of a conscientious objector in a military prison is not unique. As a consequence of severe beatings by "fellow" inmates in a military prison, İsmail Saygı, who had been arrested in March 2008, withdrew his declaration of conscientious objection. It had happened before that prison authorities did not intervene when other prisoners abused an imprisoned conscientious objector (see the case of Mehmet Tarhan). As reported earlier, this is not the first time Mehmet Bal had been arrested for his conscientious objection. He presented himself to the Army in October 2002, only to refuse all orders, as he had declared himself a conscientious objector (see TK12718-251002). Mehmet Bal had been rearrested for his
conscientious objection by Secret Service on 22 January 2003 (see
TK12718-230103), and was then transferred to Adana military prison
(see
TK12718-240103). In Adana Mehmet Bal was interviewed by the military
prosecutor, who carefully listened to Mehmet Bal's explanations. Bal
said that he is a conscientious objector and does not see himself as a
deserter. The prosecutor decided to start a trial, but without keeping
Mehmet Bal in prison. He wanted to send him back to his unit, where he
should get holidays, so that he would be able to spent the upcoming
public holidays with his family. Back at his military unit in Mersin
Mehmet Bal was accomodated in the officers' guest house. On Monday, 27
January, the commander gave order to transfer Mehmet Bal to the military
hospital in Adana. There Mehmet Bal was asked to shave (to take a
picture), and to fill in a questionnaire with 550 questions. Mehmet Bal
refused both. As a result of this, the doctors gave him three months
holidays to recover, because of "a social disturbance of his
personality". He was ordered to report to the medical academy of the
Turkish military in Ankara at the end of this three months period. On 28
January in the afternoon, Mehmet Bal was released. Turkey does not recognise the right to
conscientious objection, in violation of article 9 of the European
Convention of Human Rights, and article 18 of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights. In a decision from 24 January 2006 on the
case of Osman Murat Ülke, the European Court of Human Rights decided
against Turkey and noted: "The numerous criminal prosecutions against
the applicant, the cumulative effects of the criminal convictions which
resulted from them and the constant alternation between prosecutions and
terms of imprisonment, together with the possibility that he would be
liable to prosecution for the rest of his life, had been
disproportionate to the aim of ensuring that he did his military
service. They were more calculated to repressing the applicant?s
intellectual personality, inspiring in him feelings of fear, anguish and
vulnerability capable of humiliating and debasing him and breaking his
resistance and will. The clandestine life amounting almost to 'civil
death' which the applicant had been compelled to adopt was incompatible
with the punishment regime of a democratic society." War Resisters' International is very concerned for the health and safety of Mehmet Bal. It has happened in several past cases of conscientious objectors imprisoned in Turkey that objectors were subjected to arbitrary rescrictions and disciplinary punishments in military prison. In the case of Mehmet Bal, War Resisters' International calls for urgent protest faxes to:
War Resisters' International calls for
letters of protest to the Turkish authorities, and Turkish embassies
abroad. Andreas Speck |