The arrests of the ten activists sparked reactions in the countries of provenience of the activists as well as worldwide, both in the press and the political arena.
Turkey • On 6 July, the pro-government newspaper
Sabah published an article regarding the detention and included the section "Reminds of the July 15 Meeting": "17 people, who are majorly foreign, arrived in a hotel in Büyükada on July 15 (coup attempt) and held a two-day meeting. American Professor Henri Barkey, who works for CIA, was also there." • On 7 July, two days after the detention,
Amnesty International released a video on
Twitter, with the text "In 1998 we campaigned for release of a
prisoner of conscience Erdogan. Now we're asking him to release our staff". • On 8 July, three days after the detention, Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan attended a press conference following
2017 G20 Hamburg summit. As a response to a reporter's question regarding the above-mentioned video, Erdogan stated the following: "What was the result of those human rights defenders’ statements about me? As a result, I went to jail. I stayed there for four months and ten days. I was the mayor of Istanbul at the time. What did I do? I read only one poem. Now, those people you mentioned, why did they gather in Büyükada? Unfortunately, they gathered for a meeting, which was simply a continuation of July 15. As a result of an intelligence report, police organization raided and detained them. I do not know what will happen since they are detained, there may be a judiciary procedure. I have no authorization on this incident; the police organization will do the necessary actions. The judiciary will also take a proper decision." As a response to the reporter's question of freedom of speech in Turkey and detained activists, Erdogan stated the following: "(...) Who are those activists? Do you mean
ByLock users? Do you mean the people who carry weapons to terrorist organizations? Besides, do you mean the ones who give all the kinds of support to the terrorist organizations? Who are those activists? Take the news from the right source, then come and ask me." • On 11 July,
İHD chair
Öztürk Türkdoğan stated in a joint press conference: "It is impossible for us to accept news articles defaming and criminalizing them despite official statements that the investigations are still ongoing. Issues that have not even been told to lawyers and suspects, and those not included in the investigation files, are published as though they were real." • On 21 July, after six of the defenders were arrested,
Gunes published an article titled "July 24 attempt plan". On the article, the meeting in Büyükada is projected as a part of coup attempt against Turkish government, with the alliance of the opposing political parties
HDP and
CHP, along with some "terrorist organizations" such as
FETÖ and
PKK, big corporations and media outlets. Ali Gharavi was projected as a Swedish spy with Iranian origin, who marked Southeastern Turkey on a partition map and prepared encrypted information. According to this information, they were using back-up phones without name lists, they preferred disposable versions and the memory cleaner applications with timer settings. According to the article, the detained people in Büyükada were not alone. Several intellectuals were members of a
WhatsApp group called "24th of July, Together We Are Free". Some of the mentioned 70 members were journalist
Ahmet Şık’s wife Yonca Şık, European Parliament member
Joost Lagendijk’s wife Nevin Lagendijk, journalists
Banu Güven,
Barış Pehlivan and
Mustafa Hoş, employees of the newspapers
Hürriyet and
Evrensel, former chair of CHP youth branch
Barbaros Dinçer and one of the founders of HDP,
Sezai Temelli. Journalist Mustafa Hoş created a flood on Twitter that the WhatsApp group was formed in order to gather in solidarity for the lawsuit of Cumhuriyet newspaper, and that he will "continue to tell the truth." Barış Pehlivan also responded to allegations in an article which appeared on
OdaTV, stating that "Gunes’s editor in chief
Turgay Güler was a prominent Gulen supporter." Prominent newspapers and news outlets reacted to this article. Lawyers of
Evrensel filed a criminal complaint against Gunes.
T24 projected
Gunes as "not a newspaper, but a provocation center".
Cumhuriyet also published an article regarding the issue, stating that it is an accusation with no grounds. An article also appeared on
Diken, stating that
Gunes newspaper is owned by Ethem Sancak, who is known by his ‘declaration of love’ to Erdogan.
Sweden The Swedish government published a public statement two weeks after the arrests. The Swedish minister of foreign affairs,
Margot Wallström, stated that it was the government's understanding that Ali Gharavi was in Turkey to attend a seminar about
internet freedom and human rights. The government had asked Turkey to share the accusations towards Ali Gharavi as soon as possible. The governments also stated that they were taking the imprisonment of Ali Gharavi and the other activists that were arrested on 5 July seriously. The Swedish government were working actively with the case together with Germany. They tried to raise the issue of the imprisonment of the two European citizens that was arrested on 5 July with the EU, and they continued to inform Turkey about the Swedish standpoint towards the development in Turkey, especially in regards of human rights and respect for rule of law. The government also called for the release of Ali Gharavi, if Turkey failed to share the accusations towards him. The arrest of Ali Gharavi received a lot of media attention in Sweden. The Swedish Radio interviewed the spokesperson for Amnesty International in Sweden, Ami Hedenborg. She said that the allegations towards the detained human rights activists were completely unfounded. At the same time she mentioned that tens of thousands of people are detained in Turkey, and many for arbitrary reasons without formal allegations. The local newspaper in the south of Sweden,
Sydsvenskan, wrote about the reactions from Ali Gharavi's wife, Laressa Dickey, two weeks after the arrest. She said that Ali needed to be let free as soon as possible, and that the prosecution against him had to be withdrawn. She also said that he had worked with human rights for almost 20 years, and that she was shocked to hear that he was accused of terrorism. The public news channel, SVT, interviewed Amnesty International on the day Ali Gharavi was released on bail. The Secretary General in Sweden, Anna Lindenfors, said that the case is exceptional in Turkey, and that this was the first time that human rights defenders were directly attacked.
Germany The arrests sparked a spate of reactions in Germany as one of the "Istanbul 10", Peter Steudneter, a German citizen. Right after the arrests, on July 5, German Green Party MP and Bundestag Vice President, Claudia Roth published a post on her
Facebook page, condemning the arrests as an evidence of the failure of the rule of law and democracy in Turkey and as a sheer provocation by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan towards
Angela Merkel as they were both engaged in a
G20 Summit in Hamburg during the days following the arrests. On July 7, another institutional reaction had come from the parliamentary group of the SPD published a statement calling for the release of the activists. From the statement we can read: "News like this shows that every day Turkey continues to move away from the rule of law and human rights. Where those who fight for human rights and freedom of the press are themselves so massively targeted, there can be no question of a resilient democracy." On July 10, the Bundestag released an official statement calling for the release of Taner Kiliç and Idil Eser, respectively the chairman of the board and the director of the Turkish section of Amnesty International. The statement was made by the chairman of the Committee for Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid of the German Bundestag, Prof. Dr. med. Matthias Zimmer and it appealed the Turkish Ambassador to Germany to encourage the Turkish government to release the two. The statement acknowledges the activists arrested on 5 July but does not further comment on their release. On July 18, the German publication
Der Taggesspiegel reported a statement by German Chancellor Angela Merkel calling for the release of Peter Steudtner and his colleagues. "We are firmly convinced that this arrest is absolutely unjustified [...] We declare our solidarity with him and the other arrested [...] And we will do everything on the part of the Federal Government, at all levels, to obtain his release," Merkel reportedly said. The institutional reaction of condemnation was largely reflected into the German press. Some salient examples are reported below. The German daily Frankfurter Rundschau collected the institutional reactions and reconstructed the post-arrest dynamics, with the arrested left unaccounted for and their location not clear. The piece also reports concerns from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Liz ThrosselAftermath of the arrests and current situation about possible risks of torture and ill-treatment of the arrested. The piece also reports the arrested will be held in prison for at least seven days, before a court decision that could prolong or end their detention. A week later, on July 7, Zeit Online published a follow-up piece as the decision on the activists' detention loomed with the likely outcome of extended custody. The piece also insisted on the fate of the two figureheads of Amnesty International Turkey,
Taner Kiliç and Idil Eser and the similar fate that 100,000 people held captive in Turkey had encountered since the attempted coup of 15 July 2016. On July 18, Spiegel Online published a piece focusing, among other aspect of the story, on the confirmed detention of Peter Steudneter, the only German national attending the workshop on Büyükada. Steudneter's case is listed alongside the one of Deniz Yücel and Mesale Tolu, two other German citizens who were arrested in Turkey, as further evidence of the deteriorating relationship between Germany and Turkey. As time went by, the German media focused on the story of Peter Steudneter and the absurdity of the terrorism allegations. Steudneter's partner, Magdalena Freudenschuss, was quoted in a Bild article saying: "Peter has always worked for a peaceful, non-violent solution to conflicts. The suggestion that he could have planned a coup is completely absurd." == Following actions, demonstrations and campaigns ==