Turkey: Plan to Divide, Undermine Legal Profession

Human Rights Watch



Draft Law Reduces Leading Bar Associations’ Authority, Leads to
Creation of Rival Groups

July 8, 2020

(Istanbul) – The Turkish government’s plan to allow for multiple bar
associations appears calculated to divide the legal profession along
political lines and diminish the biggest bar associations’ role as
human rights watchdogs, Human Rights Watch and the International
Commission of Jurists said today. The current bar associations have
not been consulted, and 78 bars out of 80 signed a statement opposing
the plan.

Human Rights Watch and the International Commission of Jurists have
published a question and answer document explaining the draft law,
scheduled for a vote in parliament in the coming days. The document
outlines the government-led effort to reduce the influence of leading
bar associations, reflecting the executive’s growing dissatisfaction
with the bar associations’ public reporting on Turkey’s crisis for
human rights and the rule of law.

“Turkey’s prominent bar associations play a key role in defending fair
trial rights and scrutinizing human rights at a time when flagrant
violation of rights is the norm in Turkey,” said Hugh Williamson,
Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The
government move to create multiple bars and dramatically cut leading
bars’ representation at the national level is a clear divide-and-rule
tactic to diminish the bar associations’ authority and watchdog role.”

The proposed amendments provide that in provinces with over 5,000
lawyers, a group of at least 2,000 lawyers can establish alternative
bar associations. In big cities such as Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir,
several bar associations could be established. The amendments would
also greatly reduce the representation of the largest bar associations
at the national level within the Union of Turkish Bars, the
Ankara-based umbrella body with significant financial resources it
controls and distributes to provincial bars.

The fact that the vast majority of elected legal profession
representatives oppose the move and that the likely impact will be to
greatly diminish the authority of leading provincial bars that have
been critical of certain government initiatives demonstrates that the
aim of the proposed change is to shield the government from justified
criticism, Human Rights Watch and the International Commission of
Jurists said.

Drastically cutting the number of delegates from large bar
associations representing thousands of lawyers to the national Union
of Turkish Bar Associations would reduce the influence of the large
bar associations in electing the national group’s president and
participating meaningfully in other decision-making functions.

A provincial bar association with fewer than 100 lawyers, such as
Ardahan in northeastern Turkey, for example, would be represented by 4
delegates, compared with 3 at present. But a bar association such as
Izmir in western Turkey, with over 9,500 lawyers, which sends 35
delegates, would be entitled to only 5. Istanbul, Ankara, and Izmir
Bar, which represent 55 percent of the lawyers in Turkey, would be
entitled to only 7 percent of all delegates within the national union.

The atmosphere of conflict in which the draft law has been introduced,
its timing, and the lack of consultation with the bar associations
themselves provides credible grounds for great concern and skepticism
over the government’s motives, the groups said. Over the past year,
Turkey’s presidency and government have made public statements
strongly criticizing leading bar associations in response to the bars’
legitimate expression of concerns about Turkey’s rule of law crisis
and executive interference in the justice system. The government has
reacted strongly against the bars’ scrutiny of its failure to uphold
human rights obligations through bar association publication of
reports on torture, enforced disappearances, and other rights abuses
ignored by the authorities.

For these reasons, the government’s proposed amendments are clearly
designed to achieve a political purpose unrelated to an effort to
advance or strengthen standards in the legal profession, Human Rights
Watch and the International Commission of Jurists said. The
government’s move is politically divisive and will contribute to
undermining the appearance of independence and impartiality in the
justice system.

“The government should immediately withdraw the current proposed
amendment and embark on a process of full consultation with bar
associations,” said Roisin Pillay, director of the Europe and Central
Asia Programme at the International Commission of Jurists. “The
government’s plan as it stands will only deepen mistrust in Turkey’s
justice system as lacking independence by dividing the legal
profession along political lines. This could have disastrous long-term
consequences for upholding the role and function of lawyers and for
fair trial rights.”