Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Germany says it won’t hand over critics when they face harsh punishment in Turkey

January 30, 2021
A A
Germany says it won’t hand over critics when they face harsh punishment in Turkey

German Foreign Ministry building (By Magnus Bäck, Wikimedia)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Abdullah Bozkurt/Stockholm

 

Germany informed the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan that it would not even consider handing over exiled critics who face aggravated life sentences in Turkey and rejected a recent extradition request submitted by the Turkish Embassy in Berlin with no action.

According to the official communication, a copy of which was obtained by Nordic Monitor, Germany’s Foreign Ministry notified the Turkish Embassy on December 2, 2020 that it would not consider reviewing extradition requests sent by Turkey when the persons in question face aggravated life sentences.

Referring to German Constitutional Court rulings in 2010 and 2011, the ministry underlined that “in such cases, the approval of the extradition request would not comply with the minimum standards of international law applicable in Germany and the basic principles of [German] constitutional law.”

 

Turkish government document revealing that Germany informed Turkey it would not consider extraditing critics who face aggravated life sentences:

 

Aggravated life imprisonment, which replaced the death penalty in 2004, is the harshest sentence under Turkish penal law. It means severe restrictions on inmates, solitary confinement and no early parole, which violates the European Convention on Human Rights, to which Turkey is a party. The Erdoğan government often sentences its critics to aggravated life in order to sustain its intimidation campaign against opponents, critics and dissidents.

The German government’s response was delivered after Turkey filed an extradition request for Suat Yıldırım, an 80-year-old Turkish professor who has authored numerous books on Islam and criticized Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate (Diyanet). The academic is associated with President Erdoğan’s most outspoken critic, Fethullah Gülen, and his movement.

Turkish prosecutors, acting under political directives from the Erdoğan government, filed numerous charges against Yıldırım on dubious evidence including one for smearing and criticizing the Diyanet’s political operations.

After receiving the response from the Turkish Foreign Ministry, Turkey’s Justice Ministry informed the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office on January 4, 2021 that efforts to secure the extradition of Yıldırım had failed.

 

Suat Yıldırım, an 80-year-old exiled Turkish professor who has authored numerous books on Islam and criticized Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate.

In its communication to the Turkish Embassy, the German Foreign Ministry also said the authorities could not locate Yıldırım in German territory, meaning that the professor likely settled in another European country and that the Turkish government mistakenly thought he actually lived in Germany.

Germany is one of the top destinations in Europe for members of the Gülen movement who have sought political asylum since 2014, when the group was the subject of a crackdown under the Erdoğan government. The movement’s leader, living in the US in self-exile since 1999, has been an outspoken critic of the Erdoğan government on a range of issues from corruption in governance to Turkey’s arming of jihadists abroad.

Over half a million Gülenists faced legal action, most in the form of detention and imprisonment on dubious charges, in Turkey when the government blatantly abused the criminal justice system to stifle dissent and muzzle critical voices. Thousands of institutions including schools, universities, foundations, businesses and hospitals were summarily shut down by decrees issued by President Erdoğan in 2016, and their assets were seized by the government.

Human rights groups documented systematic and nationwide torture and ill-treatment in detention centers and prisons in Turkey, while enforced disappearances by elements of the Turkish police and intelligence agency have been on the rise in recent years.

Almost all European countries at one time or another have balked at Turkey’s politically motivated extradition requests for Gülenists, and Interpol repeatedly warned the Erdoğan government against abusing law enforcement cooperation mechanisms that were designed to combat real criminals after Turkey attempted to flood the Interpol system with fraudulent filings.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Turkish madrasa in Istanbul functioned as springboard for ISIS militants from Russia, China, Central Asia

Next Post

Turkish Trade Office in Taiwan engaged in spying on President Erdoğan’s critics

Abdullah Bozkurt

Abdullah Bozkurt

[email protected]

Next Post
Turkish Trade Office in Taiwan engaged in spying on President Erdoğan’s critics

Turkish Trade Office in Taiwan engaged in spying on President Erdoğan’s critics

President Aliyev praises performance of Turkish armed drones against Armenia

Sharp rise in drone wealth moves Erdogan family-linked defense contractor into world’s richest ranks

March 3, 2026
Turkey admits military support of Syria’s new Islamist rulers while refusing to pull troops from Iraq, Syria

Turkey admits military support of Syria’s new Islamist rulers while refusing to pull troops from Iraq, Syria

March 2, 2026
Jihadist oath at Turkish schools sparks alarm over extremist networks’ reach into education

Jihadist oath at Turkish schools sparks alarm over extremist networks’ reach into education

February 27, 2026
Turkish intelligence targeted Indian NGO, flagged US nationals over a documentary

Turkish intelligence targeted Indian NGO, flagged US nationals over a documentary

February 26, 2026
İlhami Balı, the mastermind of ISIL attacks in Turkey, worked with Turkish intelligence agency MİT

Transfer of ISIS prisoners to Iraq puts spotlight on Ankara’s ties to jihadists and sensitive intelligence secrets

February 25, 2026
Prosecutor accused of overseeing torture sessions appointed Turkey’s deputy justice minister

Prosecutor accused of overseeing torture sessions appointed Turkey’s deputy justice minister

February 24, 2026
Turkey funds radical jihadism in Gaza through gov’t-run foundation under pretext of charity

Turkey funds radical jihadism in Gaza through gov’t-run foundation under pretext of charity

February 23, 2026
Turkey’s national security advisor nurtured in Quds Force network

Turkey’s Intelligence admits overseas operations against Erdoğan opponents

February 20, 2026
US blacklists more Turkish companies linked to Iran, signaling tougher stance on sanctions evasion by Turkey

New US sanctions expose Turkey’s role in Hezbollah’s cash pipeline, sanctions evasion

February 19, 2026
Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

Turkish police chief who oversaw torture protected by Erdogan gov’t amid crackdown on critics

February 18, 2026

Nordic Monitor

Nordic Monitor is a news web site and tracking site that is run by the Stockholm-based Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. It covers religious, ideological and ethnic extremist movements and radical groups, with a special focus on Turkey.

Tags

al-Qaeda Cyprus Diyanet drug trafficking Egypt Erdogan espionage European Court of Human Rights Germany Greece Gülen Movement Hakan Fidan Hamas Hulusi Akar Ibrahim Kalın IHH Iran IRGC Quds Force ISIL ISIS Isis al-qaida Israel Libya Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı MIT Muslim Brotherhood NATO President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Profiling Qatar Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Russia SADAT spying Spying Activities Suleyman Soylu Sweden Syria Torture Turkey Turkish Intelligence Turkish intelligence agency MIT Ukraine United States

Recent News

President Aliyev praises performance of Turkish armed drones against Armenia

Sharp rise in drone wealth moves Erdogan family-linked defense contractor into world’s richest ranks

March 3, 2026
Turkey admits military support of Syria’s new Islamist rulers while refusing to pull troops from Iraq, Syria

Turkey admits military support of Syria’s new Islamist rulers while refusing to pull troops from Iraq, Syria

March 2, 2026
Jihadist oath at Turkish schools sparks alarm over extremist networks’ reach into education

Jihadist oath at Turkish schools sparks alarm over extremist networks’ reach into education

February 27, 2026

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.