Leader | Murat Bozlak |
---|---|
Founded | May 1994 |
Dissolved | March 13, 2003 |
Succeeded by | Democratic People's Party (Turkey) |
Ideology |
Social democracy Feminism Green politics Kurdish nationalism |
Political position | Centre-left |
People’s Democracy Party (Turkish: Halkın Demokrasi Partisi, HADEP) was a Kurdish nationalist political party in Turkey. It was founded in May 1994 by lawyer Murat Bozlak. The party distinguished itself from the PKK.
At the party congress in June 1996 masked men dropped the Turkish flag and raised the PKK flag. As a result of this, all HADEP members were arrested. The party survived the 1999 closure case but was banned by the Constitutional Court on 13 March 2003 on the grounds that it allegedly supported the PKK.
It was succeeded by the Democratic People's Party (DEHAP).
In 2010, party's dissolution was unanimously found by European Court of Human Rights to be contrary to Article 11 (freedom of association) of the European Convention on Human Rights.