Turkey's Constitutional Court finds rights violations in former CHP lawmaker Berberoğlu's case

Turkey's Constitutional Court said in a ruling on Sept. 17 that former CHP lawmaker Enis Berberoğlu's right to stand for election and engage in political activities as well as his right to freedom and security had been violated. The ruling concerns Berberoğlu's continued imprisonment despite his re-election as a member of parliament on June 24, 2018.

Duvar English

Turkey's Constitutional Court has finalized the application of former Republican People's Party (CHP) lawmaker Enis Berberoğlu, saying that the politician's right to stand for election and to conduct politics as well as his right to personal liberty and security had been violated.

Jailed CHP MP stripped of parliamentary status transferred to house arrest amid COVID-19 measuresJailed CHP MP stripped of parliamentary status transferred to house arrest amid COVID-19 measures

The top court said that the ruling will be sent to the Court of Cassation so that a re-trial takes place for the outcomes of the violations to be eliminated.

Berberoğlu was sentenced to five years and 10 months in jail in the case into a story on National Intelligence Agency (MİT) trucks filled with weapons bound for Syria. He was accused of providing footage of the trucks to journalist Can Dündar and was sent to prison in 2017.

He was re-elected to the parliament in the June 24, 2018 elections but was not released from jail until Sept. 20, 2018, when the Court of Cassation postponed the execution of the sentence due to his re-election as a lawmaker.

On June 4, Turkish parliament stripped Berberoğlu of his deputyship, along with two other lawmakers from the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP). After this move, Berberoğlu was arrested again to serve the remaining of his sentence. But on the same day, Berberoğlu was transferred from open prison to house arrest as part of measures against the novel coronavirus.

During the trial process, Berberoğlu applied to the Constitutional Court saying that it is against the law for the trial process to continue against a lawmaker who has automatically gained immunity from prosecution with re-election. He said that his continued imprisonment despite his re-election as a member of parliament on June 24, 2018 had violated his rights.