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Constitutional Court of Turkey

The Constitutional Court of Turkey (Turkish: Anayasa Mahkemesi, sometimes abbreviated as AYM) is the highest legal body for constitutional review in Turkey. It "examines the constitutionality, in respect of both form and substance, of laws, decrees having the force of law, and the Rules of Procedure of the Turkish Grand National Assembly" (Article 148/1 of the Turkish Constitution). If necessary, it also functions as the Supreme Criminal Court (Turkish: Yüce Divan) to hear any cases raised about the President, Vice President, members of the Cabinet, or judges of the high courts. In addition to those functions, it examines individual applications on the grounds that one of the fundamental rights and freedoms within the scope of the European Convention on Human Rights which are guaranteed by the Constitution has been violated by public authorities (Article 148/3 of the Turkish Constitution).

Constitutional Court
Anayasa Mahkemesi
Constitutional Court building in Ankara
39°50′42″N 32°47′22″E / 39.845°N 32.7895°E / 39.845; 32.7895
Established25 April 1962
LocationAhlatlıbel, Çankaya, Ankara
Coordinates39°50′42″N 32°47′22″E / 39.845°N 32.7895°E / 39.845; 32.7895
Motto"Rights and freedoms are dignity and virtue of humanity"
Composition methodLegislative/Executive appointment
Authorized byConstitution of Turkey
Judge term length12 years or until age 65
Number of positions15
Websitewww.anayasa.gov.tr
President of the Constitutional Court
CurrentlyZühtü Arslan
Since2015
Lead position ends4 years (renewable)
Vice Presidents of the Constitutional Court
CurrentlyKadir Özkaya & Hasan Tahsin Gökcan
Since2019
Lead position ends4 years (renewable)

The Court is the seat of the Center for Training and Human Resources Development of the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalent Institutions

Overview Edit

Part Four, Section Two of the Constitution establishes the Constitutional Court that rules on the constitutionality of statutes and Presidential executive orders. The Court rules on issues referred to it by the President, the members of Parliament, or any judge before whom an exception of unconstitutionality has been raised by a defendant or a plaintiff. The Constitutional Court has the right to both a priori and a posteriori review (respectively, before and after enactment), and it can invalidate whole laws or governmental decrees and prevent their application in future cases. Challenges to a law must be made within the first two months of its promulgation. The court decides over the parliamentary immunity of the members of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey and has the authority to ban political parties.[1][2]

Organization Edit

According to Article 146 of the Constitution, the Constitutional Court is composed of fifteen members.

The President appoints:

  • three members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Court of Cassation among its own members,
  • two members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Turkish Council of State among its own members,
  • three (at least two of whom being lawyers) members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Higher Education Council among professors of law, economy or political sciences, who are themselves not members of the council, and
  • four members among senior administrative officers, attorneys-at-law, judges, prosecutors, and Rapporteur Judges with at least five years of experience.

The Parliament appoints by secret ballot:

  • two members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Court of Accounts (Turkish: Sayıştay) among its own members,
  • one member from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the heads of bar associations among attorneys-at-law.

A two-thirds majority is required in the first ballot; if this majority is not reached, the absolute majority of MP´s is required in the second ballot and. Failing this, a runoff election among the two candidates with the greatest number of votes will determine the winner. Ultimately, therefore, the dominant political force in parliament will decide by relative majority.

To qualify for appointments as a member of the Court, professors, senior administrative officers, and attorneys-at-law are required to be over the age of 40 and to have completed their higher education or to have served at least 15 years as teaching staff of institutions of higher education or to have actually worked at least 21 years in public service or to have practiced as a lawyer for at least 21 years.

The Constitutional Court elects a president and vice presidents from among its regular members for a renewable term of four years by secret ballot and by an absolute majority of their members. The members of the Constitutional Court are not allowed to assume other official and private functions, apart from their main functions.

Composition Edit

The Constitutional Court consists of 15 members.

# Name Rank Date appointed Term end Selected by quota Appointed by
1 Zühtü Arslan President 17 April 2012 2024-4-17 17 April 2024 Council of Higher Education Abdullah Gül
2 Hasan Tahsin Gökcan Vice President 17 March 2014 2026-3-17 17 March 2026 Court of Cassation Abdullah Gül
3 Kadir Özkaya Vice President 18 December 2014 2020-04-03 18 December 2026 Council of State Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
4 Engin Yıldırım Member 9 April 2010 2031-02-09 9 February 2031 Council of Higher Education Abdullah Gül
5 Muhterem İnce Member 6 October 2022 2022-10-06 6 October 2034 Court of Auditors GNAT
6 Kenan Yaşar Member 31 January 2022 2022-10-13 31 January 2034 President of Bar GNAT
7 Muammer Topal Member 29 January 2012 2024-10-13 29 January 2024 Council of State Abdullah Gül
8 Mehmet Emin Kuz Member 8 March 2013 2024-5-12 12 May 2024 Executive or Lawyer Abdullah Gül
9 Rıdvan Güleç Member 13 March 2015 2026-08-18 13 March 2027 Court of Auditors GNAT
10 Recai Akyel Member 25 August 2016 2033-03-29 25 August 2028 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
11 Yusuf Şevki Hakyemez Member 25 August 2016 2028-08-25 25 August 2028 Council of Higher Education Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
12 Yıldız Seferinoğlu Member 25 January 2019 2031-01-25 25 January 2031 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
13 Selahaddin Menteş Member 5 July 2019 2031-07-05 5 July 2031 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
14 Basri Bağcı Member 2 April 2020 4 April 2032 Court of Cassation Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
15 İrfan Fidan Member 23 January 2021 23 January 2033 Court of Cassation Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

History Edit

The Constitutional Court of Turkey was established on April 25, 1962, according to the provisions of the constitution of 1961. Prior to that date, absolute superiority of the parliament was adopted as a constitutional principle, with no judicial review. There existed no legal institution to review the constitutionality of laws passed by the parliament, and of acts and actions of governments. The social democratic opposition, intellectuals, and the military junta that came into power by military coup on May 27, 1960, supported limitation and control of the parliamentary power in the face of abuses of parliamentary majority by the Democratic Party governments (1950–60) under the premiership of Adnan Menderes. The Justice Party, a descendant of the Democratic Party; as well as Justice and Development Party have rejected the idea of judicial review, pushing for parliamentary superiority.

The first decision the court gave is dated September 5, 1962, which was published on the Official Gazette on October 3, 1962. It was about a direct petition by a certain İnaç Tureren for the annulment of an article of the Law of Criminal Procedure (Ceza Muhakemeleri Usûlü Kanunu - CMUK), which was claimed to be violating the provisions of Article 30 of the constitution. The court turned down the case, stating that individual application to the court was constitutionally impossible.[3]

The first president of the court was Sünuhi Arsan, who served for two years (1962–64). Following the second (Ömer Lütfi Akadlı - 1964–66) and the third (İbrahim Senil - 1966–68) presidents, the court failed to elect a president for 29 months (until 1970) during which it was headed by an acting president.

The articles of the constitution regulating the structure of the court were slightly amended in 1971 and 1973.

Although the constitution of 1961 was annulled by the military regime that came into the power with the military coup of September 12, 1980, the court went on operating. It currently operates according to the constitution of 1982.

Key decisions Edit

  • Decision no. 1989–12, dated 07.03.1989: The Court, in response to then president Kenan Evren's application for annulment of a law passed by parliament, ruled that wearing headscarves in public universities violated the separation of religion and state.
  • Decision no. 1994–2, dated 16.06.1994: The Court ruled to close the Democracy Party (Demokrasi Partisi - DEP), a pro-Kurdish party, on the grounds that it violated the principle of territorial/national integrity and indivisibility.
  • Decision no. 1998–1, dated 16.01.1998: The Court ruled to close the Welfare Party (Refah Partisi - RP), an Islamist party, on the grounds that it was violating the principle of secularism.
  • Decision no. 2001–2, dated 21.06.2001: The Court ruled to close the Virtue Party (Fazilet Partisi - FP), the successor to the Welfare Party. The decision, however, stated that the Court did not consider the FP to be the continuation of the RP, but cited the Islamist policies followed by the party as the main reasons behind the closure.
  • Decision no. 2001–332, dated 18.07.2001: The Court, in response to applications made by regular courts, ruled that some parts of the Amnesty Law passed by the parliament were unconstitutional, which resulted in a minor expansion in the scope of the proposed amnesty.
  • Decision dated 2008/7/30: In the 2008 Justice and Development Party closure trial, the court ruled that the Justice and Development Party did not violate the separation of religion and state and did not close it, but noted that it had become "a center for anti-secular activities" and cut the state's funding of the party's activities by 50%.[4]
  • Decision dated 2009/12/11: The court decided to ban the Democratic Society Party (DTP) for its links to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), considered a terrorist group. It argued the DTP violated Articles 68 and 69 of the Constitution and the Political Parties Law.[5] "The party became a focal point for terrorism against the indivisible integrity of the state.", stated Haşim Kılıç, president of the Court.[5]
  • Decision dated 26.12.2019 lifting the ban on Wikipedia[6]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Devereux, Robert (1963). "Turkey's New Constitutional Court". SAIS Review (1956-1989). 7 (2): 21–22. ISSN 0036-0775. JSTOR 45348898.
  2. ^ "The constitution of the Republic of Turkey" (PDF). www.byegm.gov.tr. pp. 5–6.
  3. ^ Esas No : 1962/2 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Today's Zaman, 19 August 2013, AK Party to ask for retrial by Constitutional Court 2013-08-20 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Turkey's Constitutional Court closes DTP
  6. ^ Tecimer, Cem: "Why the Turkish Constitutional Court’s Wikipedia Decision is No Reason to Celebrate", Verfassungsblog, 20.01.2020

Further reading Edit

  • Arik, K. Fikret (1962-07-02). "La Cour constitutionnelle turque". Revue internationale de droit comparé (in French). Persée. 14 (2): 401–412. doi:10.3406/ridc.1962.13364.

External links Edit

  • Official website  

constitutional, court, turkey, turkish, anayasa, mahkemesi, sometimes, abbreviated, highest, legal, body, constitutional, review, turkey, examines, constitutionality, respect, both, form, substance, laws, decrees, having, force, rules, procedure, turkish, gran. The Constitutional Court of Turkey Turkish Anayasa Mahkemesi sometimes abbreviated as AYM is the highest legal body for constitutional review in Turkey It examines the constitutionality in respect of both form and substance of laws decrees having the force of law and the Rules of Procedure of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Article 148 1 of the Turkish Constitution If necessary it also functions as the Supreme Criminal Court Turkish Yuce Divan to hear any cases raised about the President Vice President members of the Cabinet or judges of the high courts In addition to those functions it examines individual applications on the grounds that one of the fundamental rights and freedoms within the scope of the European Convention on Human Rights which are guaranteed by the Constitution has been violated by public authorities Article 148 3 of the Turkish Constitution Constitutional CourtAnayasa MahkemesiConstitutional Court building in Ankara39 50 42 N 32 47 22 E 39 845 N 32 7895 E 39 845 32 7895Established25 April 1962LocationAhlatlibel Cankaya AnkaraCoordinates39 50 42 N 32 47 22 E 39 845 N 32 7895 E 39 845 32 7895Motto Rights and freedoms are dignity and virtue of humanity Composition methodLegislative Executive appointmentAuthorized byConstitution of TurkeyJudge term length12 years or until age 65Number of positions15Websitewww wbr anayasa wbr gov wbr trPresident of the Constitutional CourtCurrentlyZuhtu ArslanSince2015Lead position ends4 years renewable Vice Presidents of the Constitutional CourtCurrentlyKadir Ozkaya amp Hasan Tahsin GokcanSince2019Lead position ends4 years renewable The Court is the seat of the Center for Training and Human Resources Development of the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalent Institutions Contents 1 Overview 2 Organization 3 Composition 4 History 4 1 Key decisions 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOverview EditPart Four Section Two of the Constitution establishes the Constitutional Court that rules on the constitutionality of statutes and Presidential executive orders The Court rules on issues referred to it by the President the members of Parliament or any judge before whom an exception of unconstitutionality has been raised by a defendant or a plaintiff The Constitutional Court has the right to both a priori and a posteriori review respectively before and after enactment and it can invalidate whole laws or governmental decrees and prevent their application in future cases Challenges to a law must be made within the first two months of its promulgation The court decides over the parliamentary immunity of the members of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey and has the authority to ban political parties 1 2 Organization EditAccording to Article 146 of the Constitution the Constitutional Court is composed of fifteen members The President appoints three members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Court of Cassation among its own members two members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Turkish Council of State among its own members three at least two of whom being lawyers members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Higher Education Council among professors of law economy or political sciences who are themselves not members of the council and four members among senior administrative officers attorneys at law judges prosecutors and Rapporteur Judges with at least five years of experience The Parliament appoints by secret ballot two members from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the Court of Accounts Turkish Sayistay among its own members one member from a list of three candidates for each vacant position nominated by the heads of bar associations among attorneys at law A two thirds majority is required in the first ballot if this majority is not reached the absolute majority of MP s is required in the second ballot and Failing this a runoff election among the two candidates with the greatest number of votes will determine the winner Ultimately therefore the dominant political force in parliament will decide by relative majority To qualify for appointments as a member of the Court professors senior administrative officers and attorneys at law are required to be over the age of 40 and to have completed their higher education or to have served at least 15 years as teaching staff of institutions of higher education or to have actually worked at least 21 years in public service or to have practiced as a lawyer for at least 21 years The Constitutional Court elects a president and vice presidents from among its regular members for a renewable term of four years by secret ballot and by an absolute majority of their members The members of the Constitutional Court are not allowed to assume other official and private functions apart from their main functions Composition EditThe Constitutional Court consists of 15 members Name Rank Date appointed Term end Selected by quota Appointed by1 Zuhtu Arslan President 17 April 2012 2024 4 17 17 April 2024 Council of Higher Education Abdullah Gul2 Hasan Tahsin Gokcan Vice President 17 March 2014 2026 3 17 17 March 2026 Court of Cassation Abdullah Gul3 Kadir Ozkaya Vice President 18 December 2014 2020 04 03 18 December 2026 Council of State Recep Tayyip Erdogan4 Engin Yildirim Member 9 April 2010 2031 02 09 9 February 2031 Council of Higher Education Abdullah Gul5 Muhterem Ince Member 6 October 2022 2022 10 06 6 October 2034 Court of Auditors GNAT6 Kenan Yasar Member 31 January 2022 2022 10 13 31 January 2034 President of Bar GNAT7 Muammer Topal Member 29 January 2012 2024 10 13 29 January 2024 Council of State Abdullah Gul8 Mehmet Emin Kuz Member 8 March 2013 2024 5 12 12 May 2024 Executive or Lawyer Abdullah Gul9 Ridvan Gulec Member 13 March 2015 2026 08 18 13 March 2027 Court of Auditors GNAT10 Recai Akyel Member 25 August 2016 2033 03 29 25 August 2028 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdogan11 Yusuf Sevki Hakyemez Member 25 August 2016 2028 08 25 25 August 2028 Council of Higher Education Recep Tayyip Erdogan12 Yildiz Seferinoglu Member 25 January 2019 2031 01 25 25 January 2031 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdogan13 Selahaddin Mentes Member 5 July 2019 2031 07 05 5 July 2031 Executive or Lawyer Recep Tayyip Erdogan14 Basri Bagci Member 2 April 2020 4 April 2032 Court of Cassation Recep Tayyip Erdogan15 Irfan Fidan Member 23 January 2021 23 January 2033 Court of Cassation Recep Tayyip ErdoganHistory EditSee also Constitutional history of Turkey The Constitutional Court of Turkey was established on April 25 1962 according to the provisions of the constitution of 1961 Prior to that date absolute superiority of the parliament was adopted as a constitutional principle with no judicial review There existed no legal institution to review the constitutionality of laws passed by the parliament and of acts and actions of governments The social democratic opposition intellectuals and the military junta that came into power by military coup on May 27 1960 supported limitation and control of the parliamentary power in the face of abuses of parliamentary majority by the Democratic Party governments 1950 60 under the premiership of Adnan Menderes The Justice Party a descendant of the Democratic Party as well as Justice and Development Party have rejected the idea of judicial review pushing for parliamentary superiority The first decision the court gave is dated September 5 1962 which was published on the Official Gazette on October 3 1962 It was about a direct petition by a certain Inac Tureren for the annulment of an article of the Law of Criminal Procedure Ceza Muhakemeleri Usulu Kanunu CMUK which was claimed to be violating the provisions of Article 30 of the constitution The court turned down the case stating that individual application to the court was constitutionally impossible 3 The first president of the court was Sunuhi Arsan who served for two years 1962 64 Following the second Omer Lutfi Akadli 1964 66 and the third Ibrahim Senil 1966 68 presidents the court failed to elect a president for 29 months until 1970 during which it was headed by an acting president The articles of the constitution regulating the structure of the court were slightly amended in 1971 and 1973 Although the constitution of 1961 was annulled by the military regime that came into the power with the military coup of September 12 1980 the court went on operating It currently operates according to the constitution of 1982 Key decisions Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2023 Decision no 1989 12 dated 07 03 1989 The Court in response to then president Kenan Evren s application for annulment of a law passed by parliament ruled that wearing headscarves in public universities violated the separation of religion and state Decision no 1994 2 dated 16 06 1994 The Court ruled to close the Democracy Party Demokrasi Partisi DEP a pro Kurdish party on the grounds that it violated the principle of territorial national integrity and indivisibility Decision no 1998 1 dated 16 01 1998 The Court ruled to close the Welfare Party Refah Partisi RP an Islamist party on the grounds that it was violating the principle of secularism Decision no 2001 2 dated 21 06 2001 The Court ruled to close the Virtue Party Fazilet Partisi FP the successor to the Welfare Party The decision however stated that the Court did not consider the FP to be the continuation of the RP but cited the Islamist policies followed by the party as the main reasons behind the closure Decision no 2001 332 dated 18 07 2001 The Court in response to applications made by regular courts ruled that some parts of the Amnesty Law passed by the parliament were unconstitutional which resulted in a minor expansion in the scope of the proposed amnesty Decision dated 2008 7 30 In the 2008 Justice and Development Party closure trial the court ruled that the Justice and Development Party did not violate the separation of religion and state and did not close it but noted that it had become a center for anti secular activities and cut the state s funding of the party s activities by 50 4 Decision dated 2009 12 11 The court decided to ban the Democratic Society Party DTP for its links to the Kurdistan Workers Party PKK considered a terrorist group It argued the DTP violated Articles 68 and 69 of the Constitution and the Political Parties Law 5 The party became a focal point for terrorism against the indivisible integrity of the state stated Hasim Kilic president of the Court 5 Decision dated 26 12 2019 lifting the ban on Wikipedia 6 See also EditJudicial system of Turkey Constitution Constitutionalism Constitutional economics Jurisprudence Rule of law Judiciary Rule According to Higher Law Rapporteur Judge Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalent InstitutionsReferences Edit Devereux Robert 1963 Turkey s New Constitutional Court SAIS Review 1956 1989 7 2 21 22 ISSN 0036 0775 JSTOR 45348898 The constitution of the Republic of Turkey PDF www byegm gov tr pp 5 6 Esas No 1962 2 Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Today s Zaman 19 August 2013 AK Party to ask for retrial by Constitutional Court Archived 2013 08 20 at the Wayback Machine a b Turkey s Constitutional Court closes DTP Tecimer Cem Why the Turkish Constitutional Court s Wikipedia Decision is No Reason to Celebrate Verfassungsblog 20 01 2020Further reading EditArik K Fikret 1962 07 02 La Cour constitutionnelle turque Revue internationale de droit compare in French Persee 14 2 401 412 doi 10 3406 ridc 1962 13364 External links EditOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Constitutional Court of Turkey amp oldid 1175697903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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