SUMMARY OF THE LEGAL PROCESS
Following his election, Atalay was not released from the prison, and he made his individual application to the Constitutional Court, the highest judicial authority in the country. On October 25, 2023, the Constitutional Court ruled that Can Atalay's “right to be elected and to engage in political activity” guaranteed under Article 67 and his “right to liberty and security of person” guaranteed under Article 19 of the Constitution had been violated, and that his retrial, stay of execution and release should be ordered.
However, the 3rd Criminal Chamber of the Court of Cassation sparked a new crisis by deciding that the Constitutional Court's decision “should not be complied with and a criminal complaint should be filed against the members of the Constitutional Court”.
A second application was made to the Constitutional Court due to the non-implementation of its ruling on Can Atalay, and the court ruled on December 21, 2023 that the decision was in violation, and ordered once again the retrial, stay of execution, and the release of Can Atalay.
However the 3rd Criminal Chamber of the Court of Cassation still ruled for the second time that there was no judiciary need to comply with the Constitutional Court's decision.
5 MONTHS OF UNEXPLAINED REASONING
Starting in October 2023 and lasting until the end of January 2024, the events were presented by the government as a “difference of interpretation” between the Constitutional Court and the Court of Cassation.
Although different tendencies within the government that existed until this date did not disappear, a decision was finally made by their side and implemented: By the session of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey on January 30, 2024, the letter of the 3rd Criminal Chamber of the Court of Cassation was read and Can Atalay's parliamentary seat was revoked.
After the revocation, applications were made to the Constitutional Court on behalf of Can Atalay and the Workers' Party of Turkey (TİP), as well as on behalf of CHP and DEM Party, requesting the annulment of the parliamentary disqualification.
The Constitutional Court convened on February 22, 2024 and rendered its decision, however this decision was put on hold without any reasoning until it was published in the official gazette on August 1, 2024.