AKP and MHP Court of Cassation horse-trading
The appointments that need to be made within six months to fill 100 additional places on the Court of Cassation created under a decree with the force of law will be made after the 24 June elections.
Alican UludağFresh purge?
In the senior judicial lobbies there are said to be those who are opposed to the new appointments to the Court of Cassation and Council of State. It is noted that the Court of Cassation in particular does not have a caseload problem and, consequently, the newly appointed members will create a surplus. Interpretations are also doing the rounds that, “If 100 new members are appointed, there will be a surplus of members on the Court of Cassation. To reduce this surplus, the government will before long have to issue a fresh statute. Under such circumstances, the social democrats and nationalists on the Court of Cassation could be purged. This could be the long-term thinking behind the plan to appoint 100 new members to the Court of Cassation.”
If Erdoğan is not elected
In postponing the appointment of members until after the election, one prospect that is worrying the ruling party is the possibility of Erdoğan losing the elections. In this case, the Board of Judges and Prosecutors to be chaired by the Minister of Justice who will be appointed by the new president may appoint members and end the AKP’s control of the judiciary.
Trials awaited
It is said that one influential reason for the postponing of the membership appointments to the Court of Cassation is that it has not yet been possible to conclude the FETO and coup trials. There is talk of presiding and non-presiding judges who are hearing many important cases being excluded if membership selection is made just now. It is also claimed that this will negatively affect the trials. Big trials like the Akıncı and General Staff Overarching Trial are still in progress and it is said that the presiding and non-presiding judges hearing these cases wish to be Court of Cassation members. To this end, these trials must be completed as soon as possible.
Reduced to half
With the aim of purging “Gulenist members,” the government had reduced the number of Court of Cassation and Council of State members by half under a statute it issued prior to the 15 July coup. The number of Court of Cassation members was reduced from 516 to 310 and the number of Council of State members from 195 to 116. Cited as the legal grounds for this change was the reduced caseload with appeal courts having come into operation. However, under Decree with the Force of Law number 696 promulgated on 24 December 2017, the government created a body of new members numbering 100 on the Court of Cassation and 16 on the Council of State. A provision whereby the appointment of this body of members would be conducted “no later than six months” as of 24 December was included in the Decree with the Force of Law. This period will end on 24 June.
AKP ve MHP'nin Yargıtay pazarlığı