Torture And Other Abuses Makes Turkey American As
Apple Pie
Ballad of reading (Mumia in) gaol
By Linn WashingtonDecember 01, 2015
"Information
Clearing House" - "TCBH"
- On the topic of torture the nation of Turkey could teach
some gruesome techniques to ISIS, the terrorist movement executing a
savage reign across Syria and beyond (reportedly with Turkish
government support).
That reality of brutality in Turkey – another
problematic American ally – is a fact known all too well by Turgay
Ulu, a Turkish journalist who endured a 15-year imprisonment in
Turkey, where he was tortured. During Ulu’s long imprisonment,
Turkish authorities justified his conviction on their claim that
they had evidence against him –- evidence authorities obtained from
two other victims of torture.
“I was tortured with electro shocks,” Ulu said
during an interview earlier this year in Berlin, Germany where he is
a leading figure in a movement for refugee rights. Ulu’s long
imprisonment in Turkey led many, including Amnesty International, to
consider him a political prisoner. Ulu was released from a Turkish
prison in 2011 and he immediately fled to Europe.
Ulu was initially arrested in 1996 when Turkish
authorities accused the then 23-year-old of belonging to two
communist organizations. Ulu admits being a “Marxist” activist in
Turkey but denies membership in those two organizations. A report
Amnesty International released in 2006 examining serious flaws in
Turkey’s justice system cited Ulu’s case. That AI report noted it
was “highly improbable” that Ulu would be involved in “two
ideologically unrelated” armed organizations.
“They tortured me but I still would not talk to
the police,” Ulu said. “When I did not talk to the police they said
that was proof that I was a terrorist because I did not talk.”
Ulu received a death sentence for one of the many
charges Turkish authorities filed against him. That death sentence
was converted to a life sentence in 2002. Twenty-days after Ulu’s
release from prison in 2011, Turkish authorities reinstated the life
sentence. If Ulu returns to Turkey he faces a return to prison.
The U.S. State Department’s most recent “Human
Rights Practices” report noted the existence of “torture” in Turkey
despite torture being prohibited by Turkish law. That State
Department report, released in June 2015, also stated the Turkish
“government or its agents allegedly committed arbitrary or unlawful
killings.” Prison conditions in Turkey are “poor” that report
stated, noting “brutality” by guards -- including brutality against
children.
Turkey made international news recently when it
shot down a Russian jet bomber that it alleged had briefly entered
Turkish airspace near the border with Syria (Russia, and even some
US government sources, say the Russian plane did not enter Turkey,
and in fact say the Turkish jet that downed it fired its missile
while in Syrian airspace). A few months ago Russia began bombing
opponents of Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad. For the past few
years Turkey’s president, Recep Erdogan, has actively worked to
overthrow Syria’s president.
Some experts contend Turkey downed that jet as
retaliation against Russia for Russia’s bombing of
anti-Syrian-government rebels supported by Turkey, and even for
bombing tanker trucks delivering embargoes ISIS fuel oil for sale
and transhippment inside Turkey.
However, experts also see the shoot-down as yet
another attempt by Turkey to drag the U.S. deeper into the Syrian
conflict. In 2013 Turkey urged a U.S. attack on Syrian government
forces as retaliation for a deadly poison gas incident initially
blamed by Turkey and the US on al-Assad forces. That incident,
evidence later indicated, was actually a covert "false flag"
operation by Turkish intelligence operatives devised to provoke a
strong American military response against al-Assad. Russia brokered
a deal back then that averted a U.S. aerial attack on al-Assad –- a
deal that angered Turkey’s Erdogan.
Shortly after Turkey shot down that Russian jet,
U.S. President Obama declared publicly that Turkey – a member of
NATO – had a right to defend its territory. In 2014 when the U.S.
began bombing ISIS targets in Syria, U.S. news coverage at that time
stated Obama Administration personnel expressed frustration over
Turkey’s failures to do more “militarily” against ISIS. After the
shoot-down, Obama announced sending more special ops troops into
Syria and increased bombing in Syria.
Some funding for ISIS comes from selling oil on
the black market. ISIS gets that oil from Syrian oil fields that
ISIS controls. ISIS ships that oil through Turkey. Entities in
Turkey, including, allegedly, a son of President Erdogan, purchase
some of that ISIS oil, according to reliable reports.
ISIS also receives funding from entities and
individuals in Saudi Arabia, another American ally and another
nation working to overthrow Syria’s al-Assad. That 2015 U.S. State
Department human rights report also criticized authorities in Saudi
Arabia for jailing “non-violent critics” and clamping down on “free
and open media.”
The U.S. government justifies ‘regime change’ in
Syria based on al-Assad’s violations of democratic rights – rights
routinely violated by American allies Turkey and Saudi Arabia
according to the U.S. State Department and other human rights
monitors like Amnesty International.
The Kafkaesque arrest and long imprisonment of
Turgay Ulu is now compounded by actions of another American ally,
Germany.
German courts have denied Ulu’s request for
asylum. German courts adopted the posture of Turkish authorities
that Ulu is a terrorist and is thus not a politically persecuted
person entitled to asylum in Germany.
“Currently, I can’t get asylum in Germany but t
[they Germans] won’t deport me because they know I would be tortured
in Turkey,” a perplexed Ulu said.
Charges lodged against Ulu by Turkish authorities
included the claim that he physically attempted to help a terror
group leader escape from a hospital. Authorities said three
policemen saw Ulu participate in that failed escape that occurred at
a time when Ulu was virtually blind from eye problems. Ulu said his
impaired vision made it impossible for him to participate in such a
daring escape attempt.
During a court proceeding years after his arrest
two of those three policemen stated Ulu was not the person they
observed. Turkish authorities refused to produce the third policeman
in court yet constantly cited that policeman’s claims against Ulu to
continue Ulu’s incarceration. During another court proceeding, a
Turkish prosecutor admitted that evidence “does not exist” against
Ulu on any of the charges against him, but Turkish courts
nonetheless continued his imprisonment.
Ulu said he maintained his sanity inside Turkish
prisons by reading the works of American political prisoner – Mumia
Abu-Jamal. Some newspapers in Turkey publish Abu-Jamal’s writings.
Abu-Jamal remains in a Pennsylvania prison serving a life sentence
since his death penalty was overturned. Amnesty International states
that Abu-Jamal’s conviction for killing a Philadelphia policeman
rests on a fundamentally unfair trial and appeals process.
“I tried to be disciplined in prison so I would
not go crazy,” Ulu said. “I read books. I wrote books. I kept by
sanity the same way Mumia has kept his sanity.”
Copyright © 2015
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