Prisons in Turkey


There are basically three types of prison in Turkey: closed, semi-open, and open. A further distinction is made between ordinary closed prisons and high-security prisons. Many prisons have separate blocks for women and some also for children, but there are also some prisons which are exclusively for women or children. Prisoners in Turkey are divided, as in many other countries, into remand prisoners and convicted prisoners.

History

In the Ottoman Empire prisons were called dungeons. In Turkey these were mostly dark and damp towers. The first prison was built in Sultanahmet quarter of Istanbul and it was called general prison.
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Besides the death penalty the Penal Code of 1858 included three different types of sentences: rowing on a galley, pillorying and imprisonment in a tower.
The Penal Code of 1 March 1926 made a difference between heavy crimes and corresponding sentences and light crimes. Besides offences there is a separate law on infringements. By Law 5349 dated 11 May 2005 the differentiation between light and heavy sentences was lifted.

Between 1980 to 2000

On 12 September 1980 the military seized power in Turkey and the five generals announced martial law in all of the then existing 67 provinces. Members of armed and unarmed left and right organizations that had been engaged in bitter fighting were charged at military courts and in some places held in military prisons. The military prison Mamak in Ankara, Metris Prison and the prison in Diyarbakır gained notoriety.
Because of the large number of prisoners new prisons were built. In a report of November 1988, Amnesty International said that the number of prisons had increased to 644 and their capacity had been raised from 55,000 to more than 80,000. Since 1986 relatives of prisoners organized in the Human Rights Association. With their help the prisoners tried to make their demands for improved prison conditions for which they frequently went on hunger strike public.
In April 1991 Law 3713 on Fighting Terrorism was passed. Article 16 provided that all prisoners charged under this law had to be held in high security prisons.

Since 2000

In 1996 the political prisoners succeeded in their objection to be transferred to the first high security prison in Eskişehir. Their death fast resulted in the death of 12 prisoners. In 2000 a similar action against the high security prisons was not successful, although the death toll was much higher. There are currently 13 F-type prisons and two D-type prisons. The prison population statistics show an immense rise from the year 2000 through 2016. In 2000, the combined number of imprisoned individuals was 49,512. In the year 2016, that number has increased to 200,339. On this date, the rate of incarceration was 285 prisoners per 100,000 Turkish residents. In November 2018, the total incarceration rate increased to 260,000 people. This number incorporates pre-trial convicts. The prison population rate is 318, this number is per 100,000 of the national population. An estimated national population of November 2018 is 81.68 million. The maximum space of the prison system is 220,000 possible detainees as of November 2018. As of November 2018, the occupancy level is at 118.2%.18.2% over capacity.

Facts and figures

According to the General Directorate for Penal and Arrest Centres 384 prisons existed in Turkey as of 1 December 2008. 346 of them were closed and 28 were open prisons. In addition there were three closed and one open prison for women and three correctional centres for children. For the same date the number of prisoners was given as 103,296; among them 44,038 on remand and 59,258 convicts.
On the homepage of the General Directorate for Penal and Arrest Centres figures on prisoners can be found on the number of prisoners for each year. The Human Rights Foundation of Turkey has included such figures in their annual reports.
Meanwhile, the statistics also include the category "crimes to increase profit". Since 2010 the cases that could not be attributed to a specific group were also included.
On 31 January 2010 the official figures were:
The following figures were presented for 31 March 2012:
In June 2010 Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin answered a question tabled by Batman deputy Bengi Yıldız. He stated that between 2010 and 2015 a total of 86 new prisons with a capacity of 40.026 prisoners were to be built.

Prison types

Using the official material of the General Directorate for Penal and Arrest Centres the Democratic Turkey Forum prepared a table on as of October 2008. Further details have been included as "particulars".

Comments of international institutions

Besides NGOs such as Amnesty International or Human Rights Watch the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment has frequently dealt with the situation in Turkish prisons. A major concern were the F-type prisons, the high security prisons that the CPT encouraged Turkey to build. and the situation on the island İmralı, where Abdullah Öcalan has been the only prisoner since 1999.
On 6 March 2008 a report was published on a visit to the island between 19 and 22 May 2007. This was the fourth visit. In conclusion the CPT said : Abdullah Öcalan has now been imprisoned, as the sole inmate of the High-Security Closed Prison of Imralı - an island which is difficult to reach - for almost eight and a half years. Although the situation of indisputable isolation to which the prisoner has been subjected since 16 February 1999 has had adverse effects over the years, the CPT's previous visits had not revealed significant harmful consequences for his physical and psychological condition. This assessment must now be revised, in the light of the evolution of Abdullah Öcalan's physical and mental condition."
During visits to other facilities the CPT marked certain shortcomings. The report of 8 December 2005, for instance, included the following recommendations: