DIYARBAKIR, Kurdish Capital, — The Human Rights Association (İHD) Diyarbakir Branch has published a new report on the number of Kurdish children who have been taken into custody and arrested in the first four months of the year.
The figures are shocking. According to the report, 352 children were taken into custody, while 116 of them were then remanded in custody. In the same period last year, the number of children taken into custody had been of 286 while those subsequently arrested had been 95.
In the last 16 months the number of children taken into custody rose to 638 while the children arrested have been 211.
IHD Diyarbakir Branch Secretary Raci Bilici accused the government, which changed the Anti-Terrorism Law in 2006, of allowing these children to be tried as if they were adults.
Lawyer Keziban Yılmaz also criticized the law, saying that: “these children were arrested for having taken part in a demonstration, having thrown stones, having chanted slogans or having shown victory signs. All of which was considered enough evidence for the court to punish them for being members of an illegal organizations. Some of the sentences given for such crimes are even longer than their age. The latest changes made to the Law on June 22, 2010, did not help to solve this problem. There is a law currently in effect allowing courts to punish children as if they were adults. We need to change it to save our children.”
At the same time of the İHD’s Diyarbakir press conference to denounce the trial against children, a child was remanded in custody together with seven adults for “producing propaganda for an illegal organization”. They had been detained with 12 others following police’s house raids in Urfa and Cizre, two days ago.
Meanwhile the military operation in Diyarbakir’s district Lice continue, while the people in Adana held a protest against military operations. Police attacked the crowd and injured five demonstrators.