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Turkish court jails Erdogan critic Kavala for life

ISTANBUL, April 26 โ€” A Turkish court yesterday sentenced leading activist Osman Kavala to life in prison on controversial charges of trying to topple the government that had already seen him jailed without a conviction for more than four years.

The panel of three judges also jailed seven other defendants for 18 years each on the charge of aiding the attempt to overthrow then prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdoganโ€™s government during large-scale protests in 2013.

The ruling drew swift condemnation from some of Turkeyโ€™s main allies in the Nato defence alliance as well rights campaigners โ€” some of whom emerged from the packed Istanbul courtroom in tears.

Germany said the 64-year-old intellectual and campaigner must be โ€œfreed immediatelyโ€ while two leading European parliamentarians who coordinate ties with Ankara said the โ€œregrettableโ€ ruling showed there was โ€œlittle to no EU perspective for the current Turkeyโ€.

The blocโ€™s chief diplomat Josep Borrell condemned the sentence for ignoring earlier orders for Kavalaโ€™s release from the European Court of Human Rights.

โ€œToday, we have witnessed a travesty of justice of spectacular proportions,โ€ said Amnesty Internationalโ€™s Europe director Nils Muiznieks.

โ€˜Judicial assassinationโ€™

The Paris-born philanthropist told the court by video link form his high-security prison near Istanbul that he viewed the entire process as a โ€œjudicial assassinationโ€.

โ€œThese are conspiracy theories drafted on political and ideological grounds,โ€ Kavala told the court moments before the sentence.

The marathon hearing has been gnawing on Turkeyโ€™s strategic but tempestuous ties with its main Western allies since Kavalaโ€™s unexpected arrest in October 2017.

Kavala was then best known as a soft-spoken businessman who was spending part of his wealth to promote culture and projects aimed at reconciling Turkey and its arch-nemesis Armenia.

But Erdogan portrayed him as a leftist agent of the Hungarian-born US billionaire George Soros who was accused of using foreign money to try and overthrow the state.

โ€œWe can never be together with people like Kavala,โ€ Erdogan declared in 2020.

Alternating charges

Kavala was one of tens of thousands of Turks who were either jailed or fired from their jobs in purges that followed a bloody coup attempt against Erdogan when he was already president in 2016.

But the seemingly arbitrary nature of the alternating charges filed against Kavala made him a symbol for rights groups โ€” as well as Western governments โ€” of Erdoganโ€™s increasing authoritarian streak in the second decade of his rule.

Kavala was first charged with funding the wave of 2013 protests that some analysts view as the genesis of Erdoganโ€™s more authoritarian posture in the latter half of his 20-year rule.

A court acquitted and released him in February 2020 โ€” only for the police to arrest him before he had a chance to return home to his wife.

Another court then accused him of being involved in the failed 2016 putsch.

Kavala ultimately ended up facing both sets of charges but Mondayโ€™s ruling only covered the case stemming from the 2013 unrest.

His treatment has prompted the Council of Europe to launch rare disciplinary proceedings that could ultimately see Turkeyโ€™s membership suspended in the continentโ€™s main human rights grouping.

Muted by Ukraine war

Turkeyโ€™s increasingly popular opposition leaders seized on the verdict one year ahead of a general election that could severely test Erdoganโ€™s political survival skills.

Erdoganโ€™s likely chief election rival Kemal Kilicdaroglu of the secular CHP party called the 2013 protests โ€œa national movement dedicated to solidarity, peace, brotherhood and democracyโ€.

Istanbulโ€™s politically ambitious opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu said the verdict โ€œhurt the consciousness of millions of peopleโ€.

Yet the caseโ€™s importance to Turkeyโ€™s broader diplomatic standing has been somewhat muted by Russiaโ€™s two-month war in Ukraine.

Erdogan has been leveraging his relatively good ties with both Moscow and Kyiv to try and mediate an end to the conflict.

His efforts have already brought about a marked improvement in Ankaraโ€™s relations with Washington that could soon see Turkey supplied with US military jets.

Mondayโ€™s hearing was held in Istanbul at the same time as UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres met Erdogan in Ankara before travelling to Moscow and Kyiv later in the week.

โ€œThe Secretary-General expressed his support for Turkeyโ€™s on-going diplomatic efforts in relation to the war in Ukraine,โ€ Guterresโ€™s office said. โ€” AFP

Srinagar News

Srinagar News is one of the oldest newspaper in kashmir it was founded by Late Mehraj-ud-Din Wani Sahab in 1975.

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