Education
She graduated in law from Istanbul University and then worked as a lawyer
She graduated in law from Istanbul University and then worked as a lawyer
She previously acted as a lawyer for Abdullah Öcalan. In 2007 she was sentenced to 18 months in jail, when she was DTP chairwoman, over the distribution of party leaflets in the Kurdish language, a violation of the law that requires all political literature be in Turkish. On 5 February 2009 Tuğluk was again sentenced, this time to 18 months in prison by a court in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir for violating anti-terrorism laws by referring to PKK fighters as "heroes to some" at a rally in 2006.
She was re-elected to Parliament in the 12 June 2011 general election.
A court sentenced Aysel Tuğluk, an independent Van deputy and the co-chair of the DTK, to 14 years and seven months in prison for 10 separate speeches she delivered in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır and other cities in vicinity on the charges of "committing a crime on behalf of the armed terrorist organization PKK (Kurdistan Workers" Party) without being a member" and "making propaganda on behalf of a terrorist organization."
The Diyarbakır Fourth Court for Serious Crimes convicted Tuğluk for speeches she delivered in 12 separate events she attended between 2007 and 2010. The prosecution had requested 82.5 years in prison for the independent Van deputy.
Lawyers Fethi Gümüş and Sedat Yurtdaş expressed their disagreement with the prosecutor"s legal opinion as to the accusations delivered on October 19, 2011 and said Tuğluk had delivered her speeches under her identity as a politician.
"When evaluated as a whole, the speeches" main idea a message of fraternity and unity. attempted to draw a different picture by cherry-picking a few sentences," they said, according to news that appeared in the press
While the court acquitted Tuğluk of the charge of "making propaganda for a terrorist organization" in connection with five of her speeches, it convicted her due to 10 other speeches she had made. The court also decided against suspending the sentence or offering alternative sanctions. The defendant side has already taken the decision to the Supreme Court of Appeals, lawyer Gümüş told bianet.
The Constitutional Court also outlawed the DTP political party. The Constitutional Court"s decision was based on a judgment that she and the DTP have affiliations with the PKK, an organization that does not disavow violence for attaining political objectives. She and the DTP continue to deny such affiliations, and they disavow violence.
She was previously a member of the executive council of the Foundation for Society and Legal Studies (TOHAV). Elected to the Turkish Parliament in 2007, as an Member of Parliament for Diyarbakir, she is regarded as a member of the moderate wing of the party. Aysel Tuğluk"s status as an elected Member of Parliament gave her legal immunity from going to prison.
But in December 2009 the Turkish Constitutional Court stripped her of her Member of Parliament status, and banned her from public politics for five years.
Tuğluk did not attend the trial where she received eight years and three months on the charge of "making propaganda on behalf of a terrorist organization" as stipulated in the Anti-Terror Law (TMK) and six years and three months for "committing a crime on behalf of a terrorist organization without being a member of it," as set forth in the Turkish Penal Code (TCK).