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Yusuf Kanlı
30 October 2024, Wednesday / Published in Politics

Constitution under threat: Türkiye’s new ‘influence espionage’ law

As Türkiye celebrates the 101’st anniversary of its Republic, the definition of a “democratic, social state based on rule of law,” enshrined in the first three articles of the Constitution, remains fundamental to its founding principles. These three articles form the cornerstone of the constitutional order and are safeguarded against any proposal for change. However,
democracyespionageinfluencelawTurkeyturkish democracyTurkish politicsTürkiye
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Mehmet Gün
06 February 2024, Tuesday / Published in Politics

The Can Atalay Case: the quake in Turkey’s rule of law

The game played at the highest levels of the state has come to the end long expected of it. After a series of forceless actions and decisions contrary to law, at the session of Turkey’s Grand National Assembly (TBMM) on January 30, 2024, chaired by one of the deputy & acting Speaker Bekir Bozdağ, the
Can AtalayGezi ParkjudiciarylawtıpTurkeyTurkish politicsTürkiye
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YetkinReport
26 October 2023, Thursday / Published in Politics

Top court ruled imprisoned lawmaker to be released: will he be?

The Constitutional Court (AYM) ruled that the rights of  Can Atalay, who was elected as Turkish Labor Party (TİP) Hatay lawmaker in May elections, were violated since he was not released from the prison he has been kept with the approval of his prison sentence in Gezi Park Protests case. Ruling on Atalay’s individual application
Can Atalayconstitutional courtHataylawlawmakertıpTurkeyturkish judiciaryTürkiye
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Mehmet Gün
01 May 2023, Monday / Published in Politics

To the presidential candidates and leaders: Call for a judicial reform

The politically impartial Better Justice Association (BJA), of which I am the Chairman, released a call to action on the 14th of May 2023 addressing the presidential candidates and political party leaders. It asks them to pledge to tackle judicial reform, which is the root cause of all Turkey’s issues, as their priority upon assuming
judicial reformjudicial systemjudiciarylawmehmet günsupreme courtTurkeyTurkishTürkiye
  • Munich: The EU’s Effort to Counter U.S. Pressure and Türkiye’s Position15 February 2026
  • What Erdoğan’s Hardline Appointments to Justice and Interior Reveal11 February 2026
  • Why the Festive Mood When There Are No Concrete Signals from the EU?8 February 2026
  • If Öcalan Is Granted the Right to Hope, It Will Also Apply to Demirtaş and Kavala6 February 2026
  • US–Iran Talks Set for Istanbul, With Nerves on Edge3 February 2026
  • Turkish Bosses Knock on the EU Door but Erdoğan Has a Key, Too2 February 2026
  • A Strategic Choice: Why Letters to Brussels No Longer Move the Needle1 February 2026
  • Casus Belli Ahead of Mitsotakis–Erdoğan Talks?”26 January 2026
  • ISIS and SDF: Two Dummy Variables and the Middle East Matrix23 January 2026
  • Barrack Declares SDF’s Mission Over, Easing Türkiye-U.S. Strains21 January 2026
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