Martial law and state of emergency in Turkey

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Since 1940, Turkey has frequently been under extraordinary rule, either the whole of the country or specific provinces. According to Articles 119-122 of the 1982 Constitution the four types of extraordinary rule are martial law (sıkıyönetim), state of emergency (olağanüstü hâl, OHAL), mobilization (seferberlik) and situation of war (savaş hâli). Martial law has been abolished and all other forms have been merged into single form of state of emergency since 2017 amendment to Turkish constitution.

History

On 27 December 2001 constitutional law professor Dr. Zafer Üskül presented some details in the daily Radikal.[1] The first law passed in 1940 was called law on extraordinary administration (İdare-i Örfiye Kanunu). It was replaced in 1971 by Martial Law.[2] The first law on state of emergency, mobilization and war was passed under military rule in 1983.[1][3]

Legal background

Article 119 of Turkish constitution regulates state of emergency.[4]

Imposition of martial law

At the end of 2001 law professor Dr. Zafer Üskül stated that 40 of its 78 years the

General Staff announced martial law in all of the existing 67 provinces of Turkey. From December 1983 military rule was gradually withdrawn. It was finally lifted throughout Turkey in July 1987.[5]

On 1 July 1982 five states (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France and the Netherlands) filed an application against Turkey with the European Commission of Human Rights. In December 1985 a friendly settlement was reached that demanded that Turkey should lift martial law within 18 months. Turkey did as requested, only to replace martial law by emergency legislation.[6]

State of emergency

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Radikal-çevrimiçi / Yorum / Olağan yönetilemiyoruz". Archived from the original on 2012-04-04. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  2. ^ See the text of Law 1402 Archived 2008-05-08 at the Wayback Machine (Turkish); accessed on 4 September 2009
  3. Gazette
    on 27 October 1983; accessed on 4 September 2009
  4. ^ Original legal text available on: www.resmigazete.gov.tr/eskiler/2017/02/20170211.htm Translation retrieved from: "TURKEY - UNOFFICIAL TRANSLATION OF THE AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION".
  5. ^ a b Report of Amnesty International (AI Index: EUR/44/65/88 - November 1988) Human rights denied; Introduction in plain text; Ob.nubati.net,accessed on 4 September 2009
  6. ^ German source: hearing in parliament (Bundestag) on 11 and 12 May 1993 Expert Helmut Oberdiek on Human Rights in Germany's internal and foreign affairs; Ob.nubati.net, accessed on 4 September 2009