A United Nations court on Jan. 31 ordered Turkey to release a judge detained in a crackdown after last year’s failed coup attempt so that he can resume his work on an appeals case.
A United Nations court on Jan. 31 ordered Turkey to release a judge detained in a crackdown after last year’s failed coup attempt so that he can resume his work on an appeals case.
Turkey was “ordered to cease all legal proceedings against Judge Aydın Sefa Akay and to take all necessary measures to ensure his release… no later than 14 February,” the tribunal said.
Akay was one of 41,000 people arrested in the aftermath of the failed July 15 coup attempt.
He is also part of a five-judge bench hearing the appeal of former Rwandan minister Augustin Ngirabatware, who was sentenced to three decades in jail for his role in the 1994 genocide in the African nation.
Ngirabatware’s case is being heard at the U.N.’s Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT) based in The Hague.
Presiding judge Theodor Meron in Jan. 31’s order also denied Ngirabatware’s request to be released until the legal dilemma is resolved.
Earlier this month, Turkey snubbed a hearing at the tribunal despite notices sent to Turkish embassies in Dar es Salaam, in Tanzania — where Ngirabatware is currently behind bars — and in The Hague.
The MICT documents were instead sent back marked “Return to Sender,” the court heard.
Judge Meron said “diplomatic immunity [for judges] is a cornerstone of an independent international judiciary, as envisaged by the United Nations.”
He also rejected the prosecution’s argument that Akay should be replaced on the bench to allow the case to continue.
Replacing Akay “will have a chilling effect on the administration of justice as it would allow interference by a national authority in the conduct of a case and exercise of judicial functions,” Meron said.
The MICT added Jan. 31’s order is binding on Turkey under U.N. Security Council Resolution 1966 which requires all states to comply with rulings of its courts.
Akay has denied any link to the organization of Fethullah Gülen, the U.S.-based preacher widely believed to have orchestrated the coup attempt.
According to the state-run Anadolu Agency, prosecutors accuse Akay of being a key figure in a masonic lodge tied to Gülen.(Hürriyetdailynews)