Introduction

The Turkish prison population has increased considerably since 2005, rising from 53,296 to 229,790 in 2017. To fully implement its security policy, the authorities have planned the construction of more than 200 new prisons over the next five years.

A repressive political climate prevails in the country since the attempted coup d’état on July 15, 2016. Lawyers, journalists, doctors, politicians, judges, and intellectuals are targeted with intimidation, mass arrests and ill-treatment. Thousands of political prisoners, accused of terrorism or of supporting the Gülen movement or the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) fill up Turkish prisons.

The conditions of detention and access to rights vary from prison to prison and are deteriorating due to the increasing overpopulation. The F-type high-security prison -called the “Tombs”- implement a strict and extreme isolation regime. Civil society organizations are no longer authorized to intervene in prisons.

Country population

80,670,000

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2017
/ ICPR

Type of government

Presidential regime

Human Development Index

0.767

71/188

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Homicide rate (per 100,000 inhabitants)

4.3

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