The Asian Age

Emergency ends, Turkey mulls new laws to fight terror

- SUZAN FRASER

As Turkey’s controvers­ial two- year- long state of emergency comes to an end, the government is set to introduce new antiterror­ism laws it says are needed to deal with continued security threats. The Opposition insists the laws are just as oppressive as the emergency powers they will replace.

Turkey declared a three- month state of emergency days after a violent failed coup attempt in 2016, and has extended it seven times since then.

As part of a campaign promise before his victory in month’s elections, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had pledged not to prolong the state of emergency when it expires at midnight Wednesday.

Instead, a parliament­ary committee is on Thursday scheduled to debate government- proposed legislatio­n that, among other things, would allow authoritie­s to press ahead with mass dismissals of civil servants and hold some suspects in custody for up to 12 days. A vote in the general assembly could be held next week.

Under the state of emergency, Turkey has arrested more than 75,000 people for alleged links to Fethullah Gulen, a USbased cleric whom Ankara blames for the failed coup attempt.

Some 130,000 civil servants have been purged from government jobs for purported links to terror organisati­ons.

Among them are judges, prosecutor­s, police and military officers, teachers and academics. Many have repeatedly declared their innocence. Gulen himself denies involvemen­t in the coup attempt.

Critics have accused the government of misusing its emergency powers to erode democracy and arrest opponents, including lawmakers, journalist­s and political activists.

A UN report earlier this year said Turkey’s state of emergency had led to human rights violations.

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