Turkey passed a new law today which removes immunity from legal prosecution for members of parliament. 376 out of 550 members of parliament voted in favour, which means the law passed and does not need a referendum. Only thing left to do is for Erdogan to put his signature under it.
The opposition has been warning that if passed, this law will be used to persecute any member of parliament that sympathises with Kurds.
According to press agenct Associated Press, 138 members of parliament from the pro-Kurdish opposition party HDP, and the centrum-left CHP are at risk of being persecuted now.
The leader of HDP has already announced that he will fight the new law in the Constitutional Court (which is kinda pointless, with Erdogan's history of calling the constitutional court's verdicts illegal).
The initiative for the new law came from Erdogan's AKP, after the president had accused HDP of being a political branch of the PKK.
Erdogan has called out for the arrest of HDP party members on grounds of involvement in terrorism multiple times now, and it looks like this new law will remove any obstacles left to actually start doing so.
Before the parliamentary vote, Erdogan said "the people do not want criminal delagates in parliament".
http://www.volkskrant.nl/buitenland/turkse-parlementsleden-kunnen-voortaan-worden-vervolgd~a4304629/In other news, Dutch customs dun goofed. They seized two works of art made by the Bolivian artist Gastón Ugalde. The art was made from coca leaves, which technically is an illegal drug.
The artist however had gone to court, and asked a judge to pass verdict to save the art.
The judge ruled that the art was wrongfully considered as drugs. The layer of vernish over it made it impossible to be used as such.
Alas, the judge's verdict came to late.
When the court informed customs that they should release the art back to the artist, they found out that the works of art had been burned in the incinerator.
Gastón Ugalde is a prominent artist from the Andes mountains. His nickname is Andean Warhol. His art, which has coca leaves as base material, is exhibited all around the globe.