Writer, sociologist and feminist Pınar Selek is yet again facing trial on charges she has already been acquitted of an astounding three times. If found guilty, she faces life in prison with no chance of parole. PEN International is seriously concerned that Selek is being subjected to a campaign of judicial harassment as a means of penalizing her for her longstanding support for and work on minority groups in Turkey. Selek fled Turkey a number of years ago as a result of the charges she is still facing, and cannot return to the country and resume her work due to the threat of arrest and detention.

Background Information

Selek is accused of involvement in an explosion at the Istanbul Spice Bazaar in 1998, a tragedy that led to the deaths of seven people and injuries to 127 others. She was arrested in July 1998, and then freed two and a half years later after a team of experts concluded that the explosion had not been caused by a bomb, but by the accidental ignition of a gas cylinder. Despite these findings, the case against Selek and her co-defendants continued, and in December 2005 a new trial was opened against her. This trial ended with an acquittal six months later in June 2006.

In March 2009, the Court of Appeals requested a review of the case and reversed the acquittal. This went to consideration, and in May 2009 Selek was acquitted for a second time. In February 2010, the Court of Appeals objected again, and sent the case for review once more. The lower court refused to conduct a review on the grounds that the acquittal was legitimately and fairly given, and upheld it in February 2011 for a third time. However, at a November 22, 2012 hearing, the lower court decided to drop its refusal and proceed with reopening the trial against Selek on grounds that the refusal had been "contrary to procedure." The trial is set to be reopened on December 13, 2012, with all five suspects being tried in absentia.

Commentators believe that the renewed prosecution of Selek is linked to her work as a sociologist researching Kurdish issues in the mid- to late-1990s, and to contact with the banned Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK). According to PEN sources, no evidence has been presented that shows Selek to have been a member of the PKK or to have engaged in violent activities. It is widely believed that she is being pursued through the courts as a means of penalizing her for her legitimate research and commentary. These concerns are intensified by the allegations that Selek, suffered torture under investigation during her imprisonment from 1998 to 2000 in an attempt to make her confess to the charges.

Write A Letter

  • Expressing concern that another trial has been opened against Pınar Selek on charges of which she has already been acquitted three times;
  • Urging that the charges against Selek are dismissed.

Send Your Letter To

Mr. Sadullah Ergin
Minister of Justice
06669 Kızılay
Ankara
Turkey
Fax: 00 90 312 419 3370


Please copy appeals to the diplomatic representative for Turkey in your country if possible.