November, 01 2019, 12:00am EDT

Hundreds in Turkey Arrested in Crackdown on Critics of Military Offensive in Syria
Note: Spokespeople are available for comment in Washington D.C.
Hundreds of people have been detained in Turkey for commenting or reporting on Turkey's recent military offensive in northeast Syria and are facing absurd criminal charges as the government intensifies its crackdown on critical voices, said Amnesty International in a report published today.
WASHINGTON
Note: Spokespeople are available for comment in Washington D.C.
Hundreds of people have been detained in Turkey for commenting or reporting on Turkey's recent military offensive in northeast Syria and are facing absurd criminal charges as the government intensifies its crackdown on critical voices, said Amnesty International in a report published today.
'We can't complain' reveals how last month's offensive - Operation Peace Spring - was accompanied by a wave of repression in Turkey which swept up anyone who deviated from the government's official line. Journalists, social media users and protesters have been accused of "terrorism" and subjected to criminal investigation, arbitrary detention and travel bans. If prosecuted and found guilty, they could face lengthy prison sentences.
"As the tanks rolled across the Syrian border, the government took the opportunity to launch a domestic campaign to eradicate dissenting opinions from media, social media and the streets. Critical discussion on issues of Kurdish rights and politics has become even further off limits," said Amnesty International's Europe Director, Marie Struthers.
"Language around the military incursion was heavily policed, and hundreds of people who expressed their dissenting opinions about Turkey's military operation were rounded up and are facing investigations under anti-terrorism laws."
Silencing of journalists
On October 10, a day after the offensive began, Turkey's broadcasting regulatory body (RTUK) warned media outlets that there would be zero tolerance of "any broadcasting that may negatively impact the morale and motivation of [...] soldiers or may mislead citizens through incomplete, falsified or partial information that serves the aims of terror."
On the same day, two journalists were detained. Hakan Demir of the daily newspaper Birgun was questioned over a tweet on the paper's official Twitter account based on an NBC report stating that "Turkish warplanes have started to carry out airstrikes on civilian areas."
Meanwhile Fatih Gokhan Diler, managing editor of the Diken news website, was detained after publication of an article with the headline "SDF claim: two civilians lost their lives." Both journalists were accused of "inciting enmity and hatred" before being released with overseas travel bans pending the outcome of criminal investigations.
Police also burst into the home of journalist and human rights defender, Nurcan Baysal, at 5 a.m. on October 19. She told Amnesty International: "Having my home raided and my children terrorized by 30 heavily armed, masked police officers simply for some social media posts calling for peace, shows the level of suppression of freedom of expression in Turkey."
Journalist Ozlem Oral was detained on the same day and questioned over tweets criticizing 'Operation Peace Spring' which were posted on a Twitter account not even her own. She was released the next day with an overseas travel ban, required to regularly report at a local police station, and not to leave Istanbul where she lives.
On October 27, lawyer and columnist Nurcan Kaya was detained at Istanbul airport for criticizing the offensive by tweeting "We know from experience how everything you call a peace operation is a massacre." She was released after questioning the same day, but received an international travel ban.
It is not just Turkish journalists that have been targeted. On October 25, President Erdogan's lawyers announced that they filed a criminal complaint against the director and editor of French magazine Le Point, following the publication of the October 24 issue which used the cover headline "Ethnic cleansing: the Erdogan method" in its coverage of the military offensive. The lawyers claimed the cover is insulting to the president, a crime under Turkish law.
Targeting of social media users
In the first week of the offensive alone, 839 social media accounts were under investigation for "sharing criminal content" with 186 people reportedly taken into police custody and 24 remanded in pre-trial detention, according to official figures.
One social media user, who was detained and accused of "propaganda for a terrorist organization" had retweeted three tweets, one of which read: "Rojava [the autonomous Kurdish area in northern Syria] will win. No to War." Like others, these tweets did not come remotely close to constituting evidence of an internationally recognizable crime.
He was given an overseas travel ban and required to report to a local police station twice a month. One lawyer told Amnesty International: "Using the words 'war', 'occupation', 'Rojava' has become a crime. The judiciary says 'you cannot say no to war'."
Targeting of politicians and activists
"Operation Peace Spring" has also been used by the government as a pretext to escalate its crackdown on opposition politicians and activists. Several MPs are currently subject to criminal investigations including Sezgin Tanrikulu, who is facing a criminal probe for comments he made in the media, and a tweet which read: "Government needs to know this, this is an unjustified war and a war against the Kurds."
According to lawyers from the Bar Association in Sanliurfa province, at least 54 people were taken into police custody in the province by counter-terrorism officers on October 9 and 10. Among them were members of the Kurdish-rooted leftist opposition People's Democratic Party (HDP), as well as members of left-wing opposition trade unions.
Within the first week of the military offensive at least 27 people, many of whom were affiliated with HDP, were detained in Mardin province on terrorism-related charges. Detainees included the elected mayor of the town of Nusaybin. The government later replaced her with the unelected district governor.
On October 12 the Saturday Mothers, relatives of victims of enforced disappearances who have been holding peaceful vigils every Saturday since 2009 to remember their loved ones, were warned by police that they would break up the vigil "if they utter the word 'war'."The peaceful gathering was violently broken up as soon as the statement that criticized the military operation was read out.
"Since the start of the military offensive, Turkey's already entrenched atmosphere of censorship and fear has deepened, with detentions and trumped-up charges used to silence the few who dare to utter any challenge or criticism of 'Operation Peace Spring'," said Marie Struthers.
"The Turkish authorities must stop gagging opinions they don't like and end the ongoing crackdown. All charges and prosecutions of those targeted for peaceful expression of their opposition to Turkey's military operations should be immediately dropped."
This statement is available at: https://www.amnestyusa.org/reports/hundreds-in-turkey-arrested-in-crackdown-on-critics-of-military-offensive-in-syria/
Amnesty International is a global movement of millions of people demanding human rights for all people - no matter who they are or where they are. We are the world's largest grassroots human rights organization.
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'MAGA Power Grab': US Supreme Court OKs 2026 Map That Texas GOP Rigged for Trump
One journalist who covers voting rights called the decision upholding the new districts "yet another example" of how the high court "has greenlit the many undemocratic schemes of Trump and his party."
Dec 04, 2025
The US Supreme Court's right-wing supermajority on Thursday gave Texas Republicans a green light to use a political map redrawn at the request of President Donald Trump to help the GOP retain control of Congress in the 2026 midterm elections.
Since Texas lawmakers passed and GOP Gov. Greg Abbott signed the gerrymandering bill in August, Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom and his constituents have responded with updated congressional districts to benefit Democrats, while Republican legislators in Indiana, Missouri, and North Carolina—under pressure from the president—have pursued new maps for their states.
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"Second, the district court failed to draw a dispositive or near-dispositive adverse inference against respondents even though they did not produce a viable alternative map that met the state's avowedly partisan goals," the majority continued. "The district court improperly inserted itself into an active primary campaign, causing much confusion and upsetting the delicate federal-state balance in elections."
Texas clearly did a racial gerrymander, which is illegal.A district court found that Texas did a racial gerrymander, rejecting the new map because it is illegal.But the Supreme Court reversed it.Because? Must assume the gerrymanderers were acting in good faith (despite the evidence otherwise).
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— Nicholas Grossman (@nicholasgrossman.bsky.social) December 4, 2025 at 6:18 PM
The court's three liberals—Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Elena Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor—dissented. Contrasting the three-month process that led to the map initially being struck down and the majority's move to reverse "that judgment based on its perusal, over a holiday weekend, of a cold paper record," Kagan wrote for the trio that "we are a higher court than the district court, but we are not a better one when it comes to making such a fact-based decision."
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Simply amazing that the Supreme Court declared an end to legal race discrimination in the affirmative action case two years ago and now allows overt racism in both immigration arrests and redistricting.Using race to help minorities? Bad. Using it to discriminate against them? Very, very good.
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— Mark Joseph Stern (@mjsdc.bsky.social) December 4, 2025 at 6:52 PM
Top Democrats in the state and country swiftly condemned the court's majority. Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin called it "wrong—both morally and legally," and argued that "once again, the Supreme Court gave Trump exactly what he wanted: a rigged map to help Republicans avoid accountability in the midterms for turning their backs on the American people."
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"I'm angry about this ruling. Every Texan who testified against these maps should be angry. Every community that fought for generations to build political power and watched Republicans try to gerrymander it away should be angry. But anger without action is just noise, and Democrats are taking action to fight back," he continued, pointing to California's passage of Proposition 50 and organizing in other states, including Illinois, New York, and Virginia. "A nationwide movement is being built that says if Republicans want to play this game, Democrats will play it better."
SCOTUS conservative justices upholding Texas gerrymander is yet another example of how Roberts court has greenlit the many undemocratic schemes of Trump and his partyThey’ve now ruled for Trump and his allies in 90 percent of shadow docket opinions www.motherjones.com/politics/202...
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— Ari Berman (@ariberman.bsky.social) December 4, 2025 at 6:52 PM
Christina Harvey, executive director of the progressive advocacy group Stand Up America, said in a statement that "the right-wing majority on the Supreme Court just handed Republicans five new seats in Congress, rubber-stamping Texas Republicans' MAGA power grab. Make no mistake: This isn't about fair representation for Texans. It is about sidelining voters of color and helping Trump and Republican politicians dodge accountability for their unpopular agenda."
"In America, voters get to choose their representatives, not the other way around," she stressed. "But this captured court undermines this basic democratic principle at every turn. We deserve a Supreme Court that protects the freedom to vote and strengthens democracy instead of enabling partisan politics. It's time for Democrats in Congress to get serious about plans for Supreme Court reform once Trump leaves office, including term limits, an enforceable code of ethics, and expanding the court."
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