Turkey remembers bloody 1980 coup, 40 years ago
Military coup led to torture, executions, mass trials, political turbulence in ensuing years
Even after four decades, the Sept. 12, 1980 bloody coup still stands as a black stain in Turkish political history.
It is remembered as the coup that led to the detention of hundreds of thousands along with mass trials, torture and executions.
Forty years ago, Chief of General Staff Kenan Evren, the leading figure of the military coup, appeared on television and declared a military intervention, officially confirming the coup that would drastically affect the country in coming years.
The putschists gained control of the country early on the morning of Sept. 12 following the intervention by the armed forces with the National Security Council, along with commanders of the land, air and naval forces, as well as the commander of gendarmerie forces.
The coup inflicted a heavy blow on Turkish democracy as putschists annulled the Constitution, dissolved parliament, announced martial law and closed political parties with the leaders exiled.
Torture, ill-treatment and unhealthy conditions at prisons left 299 people dead. That still haunts the conscience of the Turkish nation.
Some survivors said they went through physical, mental and spiritual torture for years.
More than 650,000 people were detained and 230,000 put on trial for mainly political reasons. A total of 50 people were executed.
The first executions were carried out Oct. 9, 1980.
Necdet Adali and Mustafa Pehlivanoglu, two individuals linked to conflicting ideologies, were executed.
Among those executed was Erdal Eren at the age of 17.
To this day, Evren is harshly criticized for remarks about Eren's execution. "Shall we not hang them but instead feed?" he asked.
A court changed Eren's age in an effort to hold the execution.
A total of 14,000 people were stripped of their citizenship and 30,000 dismissed from posts, including 4,000 teachers and academics. Culture and the arts suffered its share as more than 1,000 movies were banned.
The new Constitution forged by the National Security Council received 98% of votes at a referendum held in 1982 with many questioning the reliability of the results as the military junta was in full charge of all organizations.
The coup plotters added the 15th temporary Article in the Constitution which helped them live freely without risk of being tried. But Turkish democracy slapped coup plotters as a new referendum held Sept. 12, 2010, abolished the article and paved the way for trials.
Top Turkish prosecutors in Ankara launched a criminal probe into Evren and former Air Force head Tahsin Sahinkaya. Their trials marked the first time in Turkish history that coup plotters appeared in a courtroom.
The men were accused of partly altering or completely eliminating the constitutional order of the republic and disrupting parliament.
Neither of them participated physically in their trials, due to health conditions, and they rejected the charges.
The courts sentenced them to prison and the former top commanders were stripped of military decorations.
Evren and Sahinkaya died in 2015 -- Evren at age of 98 and Sahinkaya at 90.