Turkish parliament may nix basis for 1960 coup trial
- Türkiye
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 04:52 | 10 June 2020
- Modified Date: 04:52 | 10 June 2020
Following a coup, in 1960 a military court tried Adnan Menderes, the nation's first democratically elected prime minister, along with leading Democratic Party (DP) members, resulting in three executions the following year.
Moving to cancel the legal rationalization for that trial, a bill submitted by Parliament Speaker Mustafa Şentop said that the coup-era court had overstepped its power and violated fundamental rights and freedoms.
Last month President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan inaugurated Democracy and Liberties Island on Yassiada, one of Istanbul's Princes' Islands where the trial took place.
"In fact, it was not a trial but the murder of law by those who violated the Constitution by orchestrating a coup and accusing the country's legitimate rulers of violating the Constitution," said Erdoğan.
Under the bill, the criminal and archive records of the coup trial victims would be expunged by the Justice Ministry.
The bill also paves the way of compensation for damage for the coup trial victims.
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