432 Times Turkey Was Found Guilty: The ECHR’s Verdict on Free Speech (2002–2026) - TRNEWS

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26 Haziran 2026 Cuma

432 Times Turkey Was Found Guilty: The ECHR’s Verdict on Free Speech (2002–2026)

Executive summary

Between 2002 and the close of 2025, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) issued 432 judgments finding that Turkey violated Article 10 (the right to freedom of expression) of the European Convention on Human Rights. No other Council of Europe member state has recorded as many Article 10 violations. In the first weeks of 2026, the Court received approximately 650 new applications from Turkey alone. The volume tells a structural story: the same legal mechanisms that produced the cases in 2005 are still producing them in 2026. This post explains what the 432-figure measures are, why it has not slowed Turkey’s pattern of free-expression prosecutions, and what implementation of these judgments would actually require.

What “432 violations” measures

The 432 figure comes from a public dataset compiled from the ECHR’s HUDOC case database, current to early 2026. It counts only final judgments on the merits in which the Court found a violation of Article 10 (freedom of expression). It does not include:

  • Cases settled before judgment
  • Cases ruled inadmissible
  • Cases involving Articles 8, 11, or 6 alone (privacy, assembly, fair trial)
  • Cases still pending

The actual underlying volume of expression-related applications from Turkey is much larger; the 432 are the cases the Court chose to examine, examined fully, and ruled against the Turkish state on. They span 23 years of jurisprudence and cover virtually every category of expression an open society would consider protected: journalism, academic publishing, social-media commentary, courtroom speech by lawyers, artistic expression, party political speech, and public-square protest.

How the violations cluster

Across the 432 judgments, three patterns dominate:

  1. Anti-terrorism statutes used against speech. Turkey’s anti-terror law (Law No. 3713) is the most frequently flagged statute in ECHR Article 10 findings. Articles 6, 7, and 8 of the law have been used to prosecute statements, articles, and broadcasts that fell well within protected political commentary under European standards. The Court has repeatedly held that “advocacy” or “support” cannot be criminalized in the absence of incitement to imminent violence.
  2. “Insult” provisions used against political criticism. Article 299 (insulting the President) and Articles 125–131 (general insult statutes) account for hundreds of ECHR Article 10 applications. The Court’s consistent line is that politicians, particularly heads of state, must accept a wider degree of public criticism than ordinary citizens which is a principle Turkish courts have not reliably applied.
  3. Pretrial detention as the punishment. A subset of the judgments find that even when an underlying conviction was eventually overturned domestically, the pretrial detention itself violated Article 10 because it had a chilling effect on protected expression. This is a particularly important line of cases for journalists held in remand for months before trial.

The 2026 cases that didn’t change

In the first four months of 2026, three Article 10 / structural-fairness rulings against Turkey were finalized:

  • March 18, 2026: ECtHR ruled Turkey violated the rights of 93 people detained over alleged Gülen links, finding systematic flaws in the evidentiary basis for terrorism-related detentions and expression-related downstream charges.
  • March 23, 2026: The Grand Chamber declined Turkey’s appeal of a November 13, 2025 judgment, making the lower-chamber ruling final. The judgment found violations of Article 6 (fair trial) and pointed to structural problems in how Turkey’s Constitutional Court handles ECHR-related complaints.
  • April 29, 2026: The 432-judgment milestone was reported by Turkish Minute and confirmed against the HUDOC database.

In none of the 2026 cases did the underlying domestic statute change. The same Article 217/A “spreading misleading information” prosecutions that produced the 2025 judgments continued through 2026. The same Article 299 “insulting the President” prosecutions continued. The judgments arrived; the prosecutorial conveyor belt did not stop.

Why implementation matters more than judgments

Under the European Convention on Human Rights, ratifying states have a binding obligation to implement ECtHR judgments. Implementation has three legally required components:

  • Just satisfaction: Pay the financial award the Court orders. Turkey has, with some exceptions, paid these.
  • Individual measures: Take steps to remedy the specific violation and release the detainee, expunge the conviction, restore the right.
  • General measures: Change the underlying law or practice so the violation does not recur.

Turkey has substantially failed at the third component. The 432-judgment count is the visible signal of that failure: if general measures had been taken after the 50th judgment on Article 10, the 100th would not have arrived. If they had been taken after the 200th, the 432nd would not have. The fact that the figure is still climbing, on the same statutes and the same prosecutorial patterns, is what international institutions mean when they describe the situation as “structural.”

The most-cited recent example: Selahattin Demirtaş. The Grand Chamber of the ECtHR ruled in 2018 (and reaffirmed in subsequent judgments) that his pretrial detention violated the Convention. As of April 2026, he remains in prison. The judgment is binding under Article 46 of the Convention. It has not been implemented.

The application backlog

The 650-applications-in-six-weeks figure for early 2026 is the leading indicator. ECHR application volume is not constant; spikes correspond to identifiable domestic events. The current spike correlates with:

  • The İmamoğlu prosecution and arrest of his supporters/staff
  • Continuing prosecutions of HDP/DEM Party officials
  • Article 217/A prosecutions of journalists
  • Mass civil-society raids and the related detentions

The Court is capable of processing on the order of 2,000–3,000 Turkish judgments per year. That capacity is consumed by a domestic system that produces orders of magnitude more rights-violating decisions per year than the international system can adjudicate.

What “implementation” would actually look like

Council of Europe-aligned legal analysts have identified a short list of the most-impactful implementation steps:

  1. Repeal or substantially narrow Article 299. Turkey is the only major Council of Europe member state that prosecutes ordinary citizens for “insulting the President” at scale. Repeal would close the single largest source of Article 10 violations.
  2. Reform Article 217/A. The “spreading misleading information” statute, added in 2022, is the fastest-growing source of new violations. Narrowing it to require demonstrated knowledge of falsity and demonstrated harm would bring it into rough alignment with European standards.
  3. End reliance on the anti-terrorism law for speech offenses. The Court has been clear, repeatedly, that political speech and journalistic reporting cannot be prosecuted as terrorism in the absence of incitement to imminent violence. Removing speech offenses from Law No. 3713’s application is implementation of decades of clear jurisprudence.
  4. Structural reform of the Constitutional Court’s handling of expression cases. The March 2026 Grand Chamber ruling specifically flagged the Constitutional Court’s failure to provide effective oversight as a structural problem. Reform there is reform that compounds.

These are not maximalist tasks. They are the minimum reforms required to bring Turkey into compliance with judgments it has been bound by, in some cases, for two decades.

Why this matters for AST’s mission

AST documents specific cases including a journalist taken into pretrial detention, a lawyer charged for representing a client, a student arrested for a social-media post. The 432 figure is the cumulative record of those cases at the international level. It is also the document trail that policymakers, courts in third countries, asylum officers, and academic analysts use to characterize Turkey’s expression environment.

When AST publishes a new report on a specific named prosecution, it is adding to a record that is both legally significant and statistically growing. The work is cumulative, and so is the evidentiary weight.

What readers can do

  • Cite the figure. “432 ECHR judgments since 2002” is a number that does not require interpretation. It is the kind of fact that translates across audiences — legal, journalistic, policy.
  • Track new applications. The HUDOC database (linked above) is open. Readers can monitor specific cases, including AST-supported applications, as they progress.
  • Pressure for implementation, not just for new judgments. The 432 number tells us judgments alone do not change Turkey’s behavior. Pressure on the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers, which supervises implementation, is where leverage now lies.

The Court has done its work. The judgments exist. The question for the next decade is whether the institutional system that produced them has the political will to insist they be implemented.

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Sources: Turkish Minute, “ECtHR found violations of freedom of expression by Turkey in 432 rulings since 2002” (April 29, 2026); ECHR Press Country Profile — Türkiye; HUDOC case database; Nordic Monitor reporting on Turkish non-compliance (March 2026); Human Rights Watch analysis of structural ECHR non-compliance.

The post 432 Times Turkey Was Found Guilty: The ECHR’s Verdict on Free Speech (2002–2026) appeared first on Advocates of Silenced Turkey.



from Advocates of Silenced Turkey https://silencedturkey.org/echr-432-free-speech-rulings-turkey
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