Grand National Assembly of Turkey explained

Grand National Assembly of Turkey
Coa Pic:Seal of the Turkish Parliament (Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi).svg
Background Color:
  1. E30A17
Legislature:28th Parliament of Turkey
Coa Res:180px
Coa Caption:Seal of the Turkish Parliament
Native Name:Turkish: Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi
House Type:Unicameral
Leader1 Type:Speaker
Leader1:Numan Kurtulmuş
Party1:AK Party
Election1:7 June 2023
Leader2 Type:Deputy Speakers
Leader2:Bekir Bozdağ, AK Party
Gülizar Biçer Karaca, CHP
Celal Adan, MHP
Sırrı Süreyya Önder, DEM Party
Leader3 Type:Government Group Leader
Party3:AK Party
Election3:30 May 2023
Leader4 Type:Main Opposition Group Leader
Leader4:Özgür Özel
Party4:CHP
Election4:3 June 2023
Leader5 Type:Main Opposition Leader
Party5:CHP
Members:600
1 non-voting member
Structure1:Turkey Parliament 2023 political spectrum.svg
Structure1 Res:250px
Political Groups1:Government (266)

Confidence and supply (55)

Opposition (273)

Vacant (7)

  • Vacant (7)
Voting System1:Closed list proportional representation
(D'Hondt method with a 7% electoral threshold)
Last Election1:14 May 2023
Next Election1:No later than 2028
Session Res:250px
Meeting Place:General Assembly Hall
Grand National Assembly of Turkey
06543, Bakanlıklar
Ankara, Turkey
Session Room:TBMM, October 2021.jpg
Preceded By:23 December 1876 asGeneral Assembly
Motto:Turkish: Egemenlik kayıtsız şartsız Milletindir
Sovereignty unconditionally belongs to the Nation
Term Length:5 years
Authority:Constitution of Turkey
Committees1:19 committees
Salary:125,349 monthly[1]
Redistricting:Supreme Election Council
Constitution:Constitution of Turkey

The Grand National Assembly of Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi pronounced as /tr/), usually referred to simply as the TBMM or Parliament (Turkish: {{italics correction|[[Majlis|Meclis]] or Turkish: Parlamento), is the unicameral Turkish legislature. It is the sole body given the legislative prerogatives by the Turkish Constitution. It was founded in Ankara on 23 April 1920 amid the National Campaign. This constitution had founded its pre-government known as 1st Executive Ministers of Turkey (Commitment Deputy Committee) in May 1920. The parliament was fundamental in the efforts of Mareşal Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, 1st President of the Republic of Turkey, and his colleagues to found a new state out of the remnants of the Ottoman Empire.

Composition

There are 600 members of parliament (deputies) who are elected for a five-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system, from 87 electoral districts which represent the 81 administrative provinces of Turkey (Istanbul and Ankara are divided into three electoral districts whereas İzmir and Bursa are divided into two each because of its large populations). To avoid a hung parliament and its excessive political fragmentation, from 1982 to 2022, a party must have won at least 10% of the national vote to qualify for representation in the parliament,[2] but in 2022 this was reduced to 7%.[3] As a result of the 10% threshold, only two parties won seats in the legislature after the 2002 elections and three in 2007. The 2002 elections saw every party represented in the previous parliament ejected from the chamber and parties representing 46.3% of the voter turnout were excluded from being represented in parliament. This threshold has been criticized, but a complaint with the European Court for Human Rights was turned down.[4]

Independent candidates may also run[5] and can be elected without needing a threshold.[6]

Speaker of the parliament

A new term in the parliament began on 2 June 2023, after the June 2023 General Elections. Devlet Bahçeli from the MHP temporarily served as the speaker, as it is customary for the oldest member of the TBMM to serve as speaker during a hung parliament. Numan Kurtulmuş was elected after the snap elections on 07 June 2023.[7]

Languages

The parliament's minutes are translated into the four languages: Arabic, Russian, English and French, but not in the Kurdish language which is the second most spoken native language in Turkey.[8] Though phrases in the Kurdish language can be permitted, whole speeches remain forbidden.[9]

Members (since 1999)

Parliamentary groups

Parties who have at least 20 deputies may form a parliamentary group. Currently there are six parliamentary groups at the GNAT: AK Party, which has the highest number of seats, CHP, MHP, Good Party, DEM, and Felicity.[10]

Committees

Specialized committees

  1. Justice Committee (27 members)[11]
  2. Constitution Committee (26 members)[12]
  3. Committee for Harmonization with the European Union (27 members)[13]
  4. Public Works, Zoning, Transportation, and Tourism Committee (26 members)[14]
  5. Environment Committee (26 members)[15]
  6. Foreign Affairs Committee (25 members)[16]
  7. Digital Media Committee (17 members)[17]
  8. Petitions Committee (12 members)[18]
  9. Security and Intelligence Committee (17 members)[19]
  10. Internal Affairs Committee (26 members)[20]
  11. Committee for the Inspection of Human Rights (25 members)[21]
    1. Subcommittee for the Inspection of Islamophobia and Racism (10 members)[22]
    2. Subcommittee for the Inspection of the Rights of Convicts and Detainees[23]
    3. Migration and Integration Subcommittee (10 members)[24]
    4. Children's Rights Subcommittee (10 members)[25]
  12. Committee for Equal Opportunities for Women and Men (26 members)[26]
  13. State-owned Enterprises Committee (35 members)[27]
  14. National Education, Culture, Youth, and Sports committee (26 members)[28]
  15. National Defense Committee (26 members)[29]
  16. Planning and Budgeting Committee (30 members)[30]
  17. Health, Family, Employment, and Social Affairs Committee (27 members)[31]
  18. Industry, Commerce, Energy, Natural Resources, Information, and Technology Committee (26 members)[32]
  19. Agriculture, Forestry, and Rural Works Committee (26 members)[33]

Parliamentary research committees

These committees are one of auditing tools of the Parliament. The research can begin upon the demand of the Government, political party groups or min 20 MPs. The duty is assigned to a committee whose number of members, duration of work and location of work is determined by the proposal of the Parliamentary Speaker and the approval of the General Assembly.[34] [35]

Parliamentary investigation committees

These committees are established if any investigation demand re the president, vice president, and ministers occur and approved by the General Assembly through hidden voting.

International committees

  1. Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (8 members)[36]
  2. NATO Parliamentary Assembly (18 members)[37]
  3. Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (18 members)[38]
  4. Turkey — European Union Joint Parliamentary Committee (25 members)[39]
  5. Parliamentary Union of the OIC Member States (5 members)[40]
  6. Asian Parliamentary Assembly (5 members)[41]
  7. Parliamentary Assembly of the Union for the Mediterranean (7 members)[42]
  8. Inter-parliamentary Union (9 members)[43]
  9. Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (9 members)[44]
  10. Parliamentary Assembly of the Mediterranean (5 members)[45]
  11. Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic States (9 members)[46]
  12. Parliamentary Assembly of the Economic Cooperation Organization (5 members)[47]
  13. Parliamentary Assembly of the Southeast European Cooperation Process (6 members)[48]
  14. Andean Parliament (observer) (3 members)[49]
  15. Latin American Parliament (observer) (3 members)[50]

MPs can attend more than one committee if not a member of Petitions Committee or Planning and Budgeting Committee. Members of those committees can not participate in any other committees. On the other hand, MPs do not have to work for a committee either. Number of members of each committee is determined by the proposal of the Advisory Council and the approval of the General Assembly.

Sub committees are established according to the issue that the committee receives. Only State-owned Enterprises (SOEs) Committee has constant sub committees that are specifically responsible for a group of SOEs.

Committee meetings are open to the MPs, the Ministers' Board members and the Government representatives. The MPs and the Ministers' Board members can talk in the committees but can not make amendments proposals or vote. Every MP can read the reports of the committees.

NGOs can attend the committee meetings upon the invitation of the committee therefore volunteer individual or public participation is not available. Media, but not the visual media, can attend the meetings. The media representatives are usually the parliamentary staff of the media institutions. The committees can prevent the attendance of the media with a joint decision.[51]

Current composition

The 28th Parliament of Turkey took office on 2 June 2023, following the ratification of the results of the general election held on 14 May 2023. The composition of the 28th Parliament, is shown below.

Parliament Building

The current Parliament Building is the third to house the nation's parliament. The building which first housed the Parliament was converted from the Ankara headquarters of the Committee of Union and Progress. Designed by architect Hasip Bey,[52] it was used until 1924 and is now used as the locale of the Museum of the War of Independence, the second building which housed the Parliament was designed by architect Vedat (Tek) Bey (1873–1942) and used from 1924 to 1960. It is now been converted as the Museum of the Republic. The Grand National Assembly is now housed in a modern and imposing building in the Bakanlıklar neighborhood of Ankara.[53] The monumental building's project was designed by architect and professor Clemens Holzmeister (1886–1993). The building was depicted on the reverse of the Turkish 50,000 lira banknotes of 1989–1999.[54] The building was hit by airstrikes three times during the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, suffering noticeable damage. It went through a renovation in the summer of 2016.[55]

History

Turkey has had a history of parliamentary government before the establishment of the current national parliament. These include attempts at curbing absolute monarchy during the Ottoman Empire through constitutional monarchy, as well as establishments of caretaker national assemblies immediately prior to the declaration of the Republic of Turkey in 1923 but after the de facto dissolution of the Ottoman Empire earlier in the decade.

Parliamentary practice before the Republican era

Ottoman Empire

See main article: General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire, First Constitutional Era (Ottoman Empire) and Second Constitutional Era (Ottoman Empire). There were two periods of parliamentary governance during the Ottoman Empire. The First Constitutional Era lasted for only two years, elections being held only twice. After the first elections, there were a number of criticisms of the government due to the Russo-Turkish War, 1877–1878 by the representatives, and the assembly was dissolved and an election called on 28 June 1877. The second assembly was also dissolved by the Sultan Abdul Hamid II on 14 February 1878, the result being the return of absolute monarchy with Abdul Hamid II in power and the suspension of the Ottoman constitution of 1876, which had come with the democratic reforms resulting in the First Constitutional Era.[56]

The Second Constitutional Era began on 23 July 1908 with the Young Turk Revolution. The constitution that was written for the first parliament included control of the sultan on the public and was removed during 1909, 1912, 1914 and 1916, in a session known as the "declaration of freedom". Most of the modern parliamentary rights that were not granted in the first constitution were granted, such as the abolition of the right of the Sultan to deport citizens that were claimed to have committed harmful activities, the establishment of a free press, a ban on censorship. Freedom to hold meetings and establish political parties was recognized, and the government was held responsible to the assembly, not to the sultan.[57]

During the two constitutional eras of the Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman parliament was called the General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire and was bicameral. The upper house was the Senate of the Ottoman Empire, the members of which were selected by the sultan.[58] The role of the Grand Vizier, the centuries-old top ministerial office in the empire, transformed in line with other European states into one identical to the office of a prime minister, as well as that of the speaker of the Senate. The lower chamber of the General Assembly was the Chamber of Deputies of the Ottoman Empire, the members of which were elected by the general public.[59]

Establishment of the National Assembly

See main article: Establishment of Turkish national movement. After World War I, the victorious Allied Powers sought the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire through the Treaty of Sèvres.[60] The sovereign existence of the Turkish nation was to be eliminated under these plans, except for a small region. Nationalist Turkish sentiment rose in the Anatolian peninsula, engendering the establishment of the Turkish national movement. The political developments during this period have made a lasting impact which continues to affect the character of the Turkish nation. During the Turkish War of Independence, Mustafa Kemal put forth the notion that there would be only one way for the liberation of the Turkish people in the aftermath of World War I, namely, through the creation of an independent, sovereign Turkish state. The Sultanate was abolished by the newly founded parliament in 1922, paving the way for the formal proclamation of the republic that was to come on 29 October 1923.[61]

Transition to Ankara

See main article: Government of the Grand National Assembly. Mustafa Kemal, in a speech he made on 19 March 1920 announced that "an Assembly will be gathered in Ankara that will possess extraordinary powers" and communicated how the members who would participate in the assembly would be elected and the need to realise elections, at the latest, within 15 days.[62] He also stated that the members of the dispersed Ottoman Chamber of Deputies could also participate in the assembly in Ankara, to increase the representative power of the parliament. These elections were held as planned, in the style of the elections of the preceding Chamber of Deputies, in order to select the first members of the new Turkish assembly. This Grand National Assembly, established on national sovereignty, held its inaugural session on 23 April 1920.[61] From this date until the end of the Turkish War of Independence in 1923, the provisional government of Turkey was known as the Government of the Grand National Assembly.

Republican era

1923–1945

See main article: Single-party period of the Republic of Turkey.

The first trial of multi-party politics, during the republican era, was made in 1924 by the establishment of the Terakkiperver Cumhuriyet Fırkası (Progressive Republican Party) at the request of Mustafa Kemal, which was closed after several months. Following a 6-year one-party rule, after the foundation of the Serbest Fırka (Liberal Party) by Ali Fethi Okyar, again at the request of Mustafa Kemal, in 1930, some violent disorders took place, especially in the eastern parts of the country. The Liberal Party was dissolved on 17 November 1930 and no further attempt at a multiparty democracy was made until 1945.[63]

1945–1960

See main article: Multi-party period of the Republic of Turkey. The multi-party period in Turkey was resumed by the founding of the National Development Party (Milli Kalkınma Partisi), by Nuri Demirağ, in 1945. The Democrat Party was established the following year, and won the general elections of 1950; one of its leaders, Celal Bayar, becoming President of the Republic and another, Adnan Menderes, Prime Minister.

1960–1980

After the a military coup on 27 May 1960, Prime Minister Adnan Menderes, President Celal Bayar, and all the ministers and members of the Assembly were arrested.[64] The Assembly was closed. The Committee of National Unity, CNU (Milli Birlik Komitesi), assumed all the powers of the Assembly by a provisional constitution and began to run the country. Executive power was used by ministers appointed by the CNU.[65]

The members of the CNU began to work on a new and comprehensive constitution. The Constituent Assembly (Kurucu Meclis), composed of members of the CNU and the members of the House of Representatives, was established to draft a new constitution on 6 January 1961. The House of Representatives consisted of those appointed by the CNU, representatives designated by two parties of that time (CHP and Republican Villagers National Party, RVNP), and representatives of various professional associations.[66]

The constitutional text drafted by the Constituent Assembly was presented to the voters in a referendum on 9 July 1961, and was accepted by 61.17% of the voters. The 1961 Constitution, the first prepared by a Constituent Assembly and the first to be presented to the people in a referendum, included innovations in many subjects.[66]

The 1961 Constitution stipulated a typical parliamentarian system. According to the Constitution, Parliament was bicameral. The legislative power was vested in the House of Representatives and the Senate. while the executive authority was vested in the President and the Council of Ministers. The Constitution envisaged a Constitutional Court.[66]

The 1961 Constitution regulated fundamental rights and freedom, including economic and social rights, over a wide spectrum and adopted the principles of a democratic social state and the rule of law. The 1961 Constitution underwent many comprehensive changes after the military memorandum of 12 March 1971, but continued to be in force until the military coup of 1980.[67]

1980–2018

The country underwent another military coup on 12 September 1980. The Constitution was suspended and political parties were dissolved.[68] Many politicians were forbidden from entering politics again. The military power ruling the country established a "Constituent Assembly", as had been done in 1961. The Constituent Assembly was composed of the National Security Council and the Advisory Assembly. Within two years, the new constitution was drafted and was presented to the referendum on 7 November 1982. Participation in the referendum was 91.27%. As a result, the 1982 Constitution was passed with 91.37% of the votes.[69]

The greatest change brought about by the 1982 Constitution was the unicameral parliamentary system.[68] The number of MPs were 550 members. The executive was empowered and new and more definite limitations were introduced on fundamental rights and freedoms. Also, a 10% electoral threshold was introduced. Except for these aspects, the 1982 Constitution greatly resembled the 1961 Constitution.

The 1982 Constitution, from the time it was accepted until the present time, has undergone many changes, especially the "integration laws", which have been introduced within the framework of the European Union membership process, and which has led to a fundamental evolution.

2018–present

After the 2017 constitutional referendums, the first general election of the Assembly was under a presidential system, with an executive president who has the power to renew the elections for the Assembly and vice versa.[70] Following the referendum, the number of MPs increased from 550 to 600.[71] Furthermore, due to separation of powers, members of the cabinet can't introduce laws anymore. This task is left to the parliamentarians. In line with this change, the seats for the members of the cabinet have been removed from the parliament. These seats were originally located on the left side of the Parliament Speaker.[72]

In 2022, at the initiative of the ruling AK Party and its main political ally MHP, the national electoral threshold for a party to enter parliament was lowered from 10 to 7 percent.[73]

Changes since 2023

See main article: 2023 Turkish parliamentary election.

PartyLeaderPositionGroup chairpersonStartCurrentChangeStatusNational affiliation
1Recep Tayyip ErdoğanRight-wing
Conservatism
4 GovernmentPeople's Alliance
2Özgür ÖzelCenter-left
Kemalism
Özgür Özel 42Main opposition
3DEM PARTİ
Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party
Tulay Hatımoğulları Oruç & Tuncer BakırhanGreen politics
Regionalism
Sırrı Süreyya Önder 4OppositionLabour and Freedom Alliance
4Devlet BahçeliFar-right
Ultranationalism
Devlet Bahçeli 0Confidence and supplyPeople's Alliance
5Müsavat DervişoğluCenter-right
Turkish nationalism
Koray Aydın 12Opposition
6SAADET
Felicity Party
Temel KaramollaoğluFar-right
Millî Görüş
20OppositionFelicity and Future Alliance
Parties without parliamentary groups
7DEVA PARTİSİ
Democracy and Progress Party
Ali BabacanCenter
Liberal democracy
15Opposition
8YENİDEN REFAH
New Welfare Party
Fatih ErbakanFar-right
Millî Görüş
1Opposition
9TİP
Workers' Party of Turkey
Erkan BaşFar-left
Socialism
1OppositionLabour and Freedom Alliance
10HÜDA PAR
Free Cause Party
Zekeriya YapıcıoğluFar-right
Kurdish-Islamic synthesis
4Confidence and supply
11DP
Democrat Party
Gültekin UysalCenter-right
Liberal conservatism
3Opposition
12DBP
Democratic Regions Party
Salihe Aydeniz & Left-wing
Regionalism
2OppositionLabour and Freedom Alliance
13EMEP
Labour Party
Selma GürkanFar-left
Hoxhaism
2OppositionLabour and Freedom Alliance
14DSP
Democratic Left Party
Center-left
Ecevitism
1Confidence and supply
15 9
Total 7

Historical composition

Single-party period

1923
332
1927
335
1931
287
1935
401
1939
470
1943
492

Beginning of the multi-party period

1946
39564
1950
694161
1954
315035
1957
1784244

Second Republic

1961
1736515854
1965
14134192403111
1969
2814361525661
1973
11854513149348
1977
213131891624

After the 1980 coup

1983
11721171
1987
9959292
1991
78817811562
1995
7649132135158
1999
1368685129111

After the 2002 election

2002
178363
2007
11271341
2011
13553327
2015.06
8013280258
2015.11
5913440317
2018
671464349295
2023
46116943502685

List of foreign leaders addressing the Turkish Parliament

The General Assembly of the Turkish Grand National Assembly hosts foreign dignitaries from time to time.[74] However, the protocol here may vary depending on the situation. For the foreign guest to make a speech a decision of the General Assembly is required.[75]

YearCountryNameTitle
115 April 1955Abdul-Wahab Mirjan
216 July 1956Iskander Mirza
31 November 1958Serdar Fahi̇r Hi̇kmat
424 April 1959Sukarno
51 April 1964Eugen Gerstenmaier
65 January 1965Nikolay Podgorny
725 March 1965Habib Bourguiba
85 December 1984Lei Jieqiong
923 April 1985
1023 April 1986Oliver James Flanagan
1123 April 1987Astrid Lulling
1223 April 1988Mohamed Zahir Ismail
1323 April 1989
1423 April 1990
1523 April 1991
1612 May 1992Muhamed Čengić
1726 June 1992Abulfaz ElchibeyPresident of Azerbaijan
1823 April 1992Serikbolsyn Abdildin
1910 June 1993Rauf Denktaş
209 February 1994Heydar AliyevPresident of Azerbaijan
2123 April 1994Speakers of the Assembly of the Republic
2213 October 1994Askar Akayev
2323 April 1995Katica Ivanišević
244 April 1996Eduard Shevardnadze
2521 January 1997Rauf Denktaş
2629 April 1997Emil Constantinescu
276 May 1997Heydar AliyevPresident of Azerbaijan
2829 July 1997Petar Stoyanov
2912 February 1998Rexhep Meidani
3023 April 1998Rauf Denktaş
3130 June 1998Ganti Mohana Chandra Balayogi
3215 July 1999Rauf Denktaş
3315 November 1999Bill Clinton
347 March 2000Abdullah II
3514 April 2000Aleksander Kwasniewski
3623 April 2000Sahat Muradow
3723 November 2000Leonid Kuchma
3813 March 2001Heydar AliyevPresident of Azerbaijan
396 March 2003Rauf Denktaş
4015 January 2004Romano Prodi
4120 January 2004Pervez Musharraf
422 March 2004Pat Cox
4314 April 2004Ilham AliyevPresident of Azerbaijan
4415 April 2004Rauf Denktaş
453 December 2004Josep Borrell Fontelles
469 November 2005René van der Linden
4713 November 2007Mahmud Abbas
4813 November 2007Shimon Peres
4910 April 2008Jose Manuel Barroso
506 November 2008Ilham AliyevPresident of Azerbaijan
516 April 2009Barack Hussein Obama
5212 May 2009Anibal Cavaco Silva
5322 October 2009Nursultan Nazarbayev
5429 June 2010Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
5519 October 2010Christian Wulff
567 December 2010Yusuf Raza Gilani
5724 November 2011Jerzy Buzek
5810 January 2012Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu
5912 January 2012Almazbek Atambayev
6010 December 2012Mahmud Abbas
6130 May 2013Moncef MarzoukiPresident of Tunisia
6216 August 2024Mahmud Abbas

See also

References

Sources

External links

39.9117°N 32.8511°W

Notes and References

  1. News: 2023-05-30 . 2023 Milletvekili maaşı kaç TL, ne kadar? Milletvekilleri aylık ne kadar kazanıyor? . tr . . 2023-08-21.
  2. Web site: Crossing the threshold – the Turkish election . 2019-04-05 . electoral-reform.org.uk . en-US . 12 December 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181212213606/https://www.electoral-reform.org.uk/crossing-the-threshold-the-turkish-election/ . live .
  3. Web site: Turkey: Parliament Passes Law Amending Election Laws and Lowering Electoral Threshold. . en-US. 2023-12-15.
  4. Web site: hlsjrnldev . ECHR Upholds Turkey's 10% Threshold in Elections . 2020-02-17 . en-US . 17 February 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200217201756/https://harvardilj.org/2008/10/echr-upholds-turkeys-10-threshold-in-elections/ . live .
  5. Web site: Turkish Directorate General of Press and Information . 24 August 2004 . Political Structure of Turkey . https://web.archive.org/web/20061005085413/http://www.byegm.gov.tr/REFERENCES/Structure.htm . 5 October 2006 . 14 December 2006 . Turkish Prime Minister's Office.
  6. http://secim.sabah.com.tr/istanbul-sehir-sonuclari.html e.g. Istanbul in 2011 has a successful candidate at 3.2%
  7. News: 8 June 2023 . Son Dakika: TBMM'nin yeni başkanı Numan Kurtulmuş oldu . Haberler . live . 8 June 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230607161451/https://www.haberler.com/politika/son-dakika-tbmm-nin-yeni-baskani-numan-kurtulmus-16010233-haberi/ . 7 June 2023.
  8. Web site: 2021-05-10 . Turkish parliament offers simultaneous translation into four languages, excludes Kurdish . 2022-12-16 . . tr-TR . 16 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221216071215/https://www.duvarenglish.com/turkish-parliament-offers-simultaneous-translation-into-four-languages-excludes-kurdish-news-59082 . live .
  9. Web site: 2022-07-12 . HDP MP not allowed to speak Kurdish in parliament . 2022-12-16 . . tr-TR . 16 December 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221216071212/https://www.duvarenglish.com/hdp-mp-not-allowed-to-speak-kurdish-in-parliament-news-61603 . live .
  10. Web site: IPU PARLINE database: TURKEY (Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi (T.B.M.M)), Full text . 2020-02-18 . archive.ipu.org . 3 October 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191003013511/http://archive.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/2323.htm . live .
  11. Web site: Adalet Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  12. Web site: Anayasa Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  13. Web site: Avrupa Birliği Uyum Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  14. Web site: Bayındırlık, İmar, Ulaştırma ve Turizm Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  15. Web site: Çevre Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  16. Web site: Dışişleri Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  17. Web site: Dijital Mecralar Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  18. Web site: Dilekçe Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  19. Web site: Güvenlik ve İstihbarat Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  20. Web site: İçişleri Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  21. Web site: İnsan Haklarını İnceleme Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  22. Web site: İslamofobi ve Irkçılık İnceleme Alt Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  23. Web site: Hükümlü ve Tutuklu Haklarını İnceleme Alt Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  24. Web site: Göç ve Uyum Alt Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  25. Web site: Çocuk Hakları Alt Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  26. Web site: Kadın Erkek Fırsat Eşitliği Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  27. Web site: Kadın Erkek Fırsat Eşitliği Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  28. Web site: Milli Eğitim, Kültür, Gençlik ve Spor Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  29. Web site: Milli Savunma Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  30. Web site: Plan ve Bütçe Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  31. Web site: Sağlık, Aile, Çalışma ve Sosyal İşler Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  32. Web site: Sanayi, Ticaret, Enerji, Tabii Kaynaklar, Bilgi ve Teknoloji Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  33. Web site: Tarım, Orman ve Köyişleri Komisyonu . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  34. Köroğlu . Veli . December 2006 . Meclis Araştırması . Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi . 3 . 2 . 21 April 2020 . 14 January 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230114141743/https://dergipark.org.tr/en/download/article-file/695461 . live .
  35. Web site: Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi İçtüzüğü . 21 April 2020 . tbmm.gov.tr . 22 August 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200822051832/https://www.tbmm.gov.tr/docs/ictuzuk.pdf . live .
  36. Web site: Avrupa Güvenlik ve İşbirliği Teşkilatı Parlamenter Asamblesi . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
  37. Web site: Kuzey Atlantik Antlaşması Örgütü Parlamenter Asamblesi . 23 October 2023 . GNAT .
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