Skip to content
Kurdish Centre for Human Rights

Kurdish Centre for Human Rights

Centre Kurde des Droits de l’Homme

  • Home
  • About us
    • Status
    • Activities
  • Reports
    • Iran
    • Iraq
    • Syria
    • Turkey
  • OHCHR
    • KCHR
  • News
    • Press Releases
    • Women
    • Children
    • Prisons
    • War Crimes
  • Contact
  • Fr
  • Toggle search form

Where is Gökhan Güneş?

Posted on January 23, 2021January 30, 2021 By Centre Kurde Genève

Left activist Gökhan Güneş was kidnapped by unknown people almost three days ago while he was on his way to work in Istanbul. The kidnapping was captured by a surveillance camera, but the police is doing nothing.

Almost 72 hours have already passed since left activist Gökhan Güneş was abducted by unknown persons in Istanbul. But the police are inactive, although a surveillance camera has captured the kidnapping of the 23-year-old. “There are reasons for this inactivity,” said the relatives of Güneş, who suspect the security forces have actually more than a hand in the kidnapping. “Gökhan has been the victim of an attempted kidnapping by state forces in the past. We believe that they succeeded this time,” said his sister Gülhayat Toraman. The family turned to the human rights organization IHD on Friday with a request for support.

What is known about the kidnapping

Gökhan Güneş works as an electrician. On Wednesday at 12.20 pm he boarded the 79 FY bus in the Ikitelli district to go to his workplace in Başakşehir. After getting off at the “Elementary School Şehit Abdülselam Özatak” stop, four to five people surrounded him and dragged him into one of two waiting cars. Then the vehicles sped away. On the images of a surveillance camera, bystanders can also be seen watching the incident.

Gökhan Güneş’s parents have contacted the police and the Istanbul Anti-Terrorism Center several times since Wednesday to report the kidnapping, but without success. They had been turned away and a complaint from lawyers did not help the family. The recordings from the surveillance camera, which the family was able to obtain on their own initiative and has handed over to the police, “ended up in a drawer”. According to Gülhayat Toraman, a police investigation has now even been initiated into the release of the recordings.

Fear of a return to the ‘90s

“When we look at the footage of Gökhan Güneş’s kidnapping, we wonder whether the dark period of the 1990s is back,” said Gülseren Yoleri, the chairwoman of the Istanbul IHD branch, at a press conference joined also by HDP MPs Musa Piroğlu and Ali Kenanoğlu.

After the military coup of September 1980, Turkey became acquainted with the practice of “enforced disappearance”. In the mid-1990s, when the Turkish state’s dirty war against the PKK was at its highest, disappearances reached their peak. It is estimated that over 17,000 people were “disappeared” by “unknown perpetrators” – that is, by parastate and state forces – during this dark times.

News, Turkey

Post navigation

Previous Post: Invitation: 2nd Human Rights Forum on Afrin violation
Next Post: Two female local politicians executed near Hesekê- Syria

More Related Articles

Prisoners in Bolu denounced ill treatment and torture News
Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic: War crimes carried out in Afrin and Serêkaniyê News
UN: Nearly 180,000 people displaced in northeast Syria News
AI: Death row juvenile offender at risk of secret execution Iran
Letter from the United Kurdish Women’s Platform to the UN News
Turkish drone targets security point in Kobane city News

Upcoming Events

  • There are no upcoming events.

About us

The Kurdish Center for Human Rights was established in Geneva in 2000, according to the Suisse civil law. In response to the genocide, war crimes and human rights violations occurring across the Kurdish regions of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria.

The KCHR, as a non-profit organization of social utility, was born from the need to  inform the European and Swiss people and the OHCHR on human rights violations against the Kurds via seminars and other dialogue platforms and to attend their meetings; to establish a dialogue with NGO’s, civil movements, associations, government and civil institutions.. Read More….

Contact

Centre Kurde des Droits de l’Homme
Kurdish Center for Human Rights

15, Rue des Savoises, 1205 Genève – Suisse
Tel :+41 (0)22 328 1984
Email: info@kurd-chr.ch / kurd.chr.geneve@gmail.com
Web : http://www.kurd-chr.ch

Compte : Post Finance – CENTRE KURDE
IBAN: CH40 0900 0000 17763911 5

Search

Recent Posts

  • Turkish Drone Strike in Kobani Reportedly Kills Nine Civilians, Including Seven Children
  • Report on Human Rights In Turkey / February 2025
  • ISIS(Daeesh) is back in Syria and Kurdistan
  • Apparent war crime committed by Turkish-backed Syrian National Army / HRW
  • THE TURKISH STATE: TARGETING CIVILIANS AND COMMITTING WAR CRIMES

Information

  • Turkish Drone Strike in Kobani Reportedly Kills Nine Civilians, Including Seven Children
  • Report on Human Rights In Turkey / February 2025
  • ISIS(Daeesh) is back in Syria and Kurdistan
  • Apparent war crime committed by Turkish-backed Syrian National Army / HRW
  • Maraş Massacre, 46 Years of Unfulfilled Justice

Archives

Copyright © 2025 Kurdish Centre for Human Rights.

Powered by PressBook Green WordPress theme