The Constitutional Court had on March 6 ruled in favor of a complaint filed by BaÅŸbuÄŸ, on the grounds that his legal rights were violated, APA reports quoting Hurriyet.
Earlier on March 7, President Abdullah Gül had welcomed the Constitutional Court’s ruling.“I see it as a very precious decision,” Gül had told reporters.
Echoing Gül, Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç had also praised the decision. “The decision is a very correct one. Perhaps it doesn’t automatically foresee his direct release, but we can now predict that [BaÅŸbuÄŸ] will be released,” Arınç had said.
“After this verdict, İlker BaÅŸbuÄŸ should not stay even a minute in jail,” Metin FeyzioÄŸlu, the head of the Turkish Bar Association, had told private TV station CNNTürk after the decision was announced.
“Turkey is currently experiencing difficult days, so the verdict issued by the Constitutional Court is important. The decision will not [only] free İlker BaÅŸbuÄŸ, but also the captive consciences of the judges who arrested him,” FeyzioÄŸlu added.
The Court had ruled that BaÅŸbuÄŸ’s claim that he was unlawfully deprived of freedom was rejected by a local court "without being effectively examined, and the detailed reasoning regarding his conviction was not issued." It added that for this reason, his conviction could not be taken to the Supreme Court of Appeals.
The Istanbul 20th Heavy Penal Court subsequently announced its verdict March 7 in compliance with the Constitutional Court ruling. BaÅŸbuÄŸ is expected to be released from Istanbul's Silivri Prison later March 7.
Turkey’s 26th Chief of General Staff was arrested Jan. 5, 2012 on charges of being the leader of a terrorist organization aimed at toppling the democratically elected government. BaÅŸbuÄŸ’s numerous appeals for release pending trial have been left unanswered by local courts over the last two years.
His arrest was a symbolic development in breaking the military’s tutelage over the political sphere in Turkey, especially over the course of the much debated Ergenekon and Balyoz cases in which hundreds of senior high-ranking former and on-duty officers were tried.
Some 275 coup-plot suspects were handed sentences in August 2013, worth hundreds of years imprisonment in total, with many high-ranking army members, journalists and academics given aggravated life sentences.
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