Numerous reports about The Tenkil Period in turkey that has been going on for three years have been compiled by (the?) AST listing the unjust rulings by the state one by one.
BOLD – The AST (Advocates of Silenced Turkey) prepared a report on human rights violations that took place in Turkey after July 15 2016. The report contains striking information on how the laws have been violated and how thousands of people have been subjected to a witch hunt After 15 July under the disguise of coup investigations.
SERIOUS STATISTICS (SHOCKING INFORMATION?)
The AST compiled reports from 24 different organizations including Freedom House, Amnesty International, American Bar Association, Reuters and other institutions in an 854-page long infographic. The report, which took one year to complete, exposed the unjust and inhumane treatments that took place in Turkey after July 15 with some striking figures:
Nearly 8,000 people faced human rights violations, 2,300 of whom faced torture.
Electric and sexual abuse are among the reported tortures…
864 children are in prison with their mothers.
The number of women behind bars is more than 10,000 … More than 3,000 of whom are “criminals of thought”.
Thousands of people who were dismissed from their jobs, whose freedoms were threatened and sentenced to social death tried to exit the country in illegal ways after the coup.
The mere number of children deaths on the shores of the Aegean and Evros River is 13.
Freedom of the press suffered a heavy blow after July 15. 187 media institutions were shut down. More than 2,500 media workers were unemployed as a result, and nearly 200 journalists were arrested.
According to figures compiled by the Committee to Protect Journalists, Turkey is the leading country in imprisonment of journalists in the world.
2,300 educational institutions have been closed under the pretext of the coup attempt.
More than 33,500 teachers, and more than 8,000 academics were dismissed from their jobs.
69,301 students were (convicted?) during this process.
197 of the students who are accused of being terrorists are under the age of 18.