Background
A jailed businessman complained that a ban on prisoners voting in elections violated the European Convention on Human Rights.
Ahmet Söyler realised he was still legally registered to vote not long after he started an almost five-year prison sentence for committing a financial crime.
Although Ahmet thought his inclusion on the register was possibly due to an error, he wrote to the electoral authorities asking that he be allowed to vote in the 2007 Turkish general election. He cited European Court of Human Rights case-law on prisoners’ voting rights.
But, in response, the authorities told Ahmet he could not vote under Turkish law.
He therefore missed out on the elections.
Even though he was released from prison on probation in 2009 for good behaviour, Ahmet remained unable to vote until the official date of the end of his sentence in 2012. This meant he also missed out on elections in 2011.