Muammer Aksoy

Muammer Aksoy
Born 1917
İbradı, Antalya, Ottoman Empire
Died January 31, 1990(1990-01-31) (aged 73)
Bahçelievler, Ankara
Nationality Turkish
Education Law
Alma mater Istanbul University, University of Zurich
Occupation Academic of law, politician, columnist

Muammer Aksoy (1917 – January 31, 1990) was a Turkish academic of law, politician, columnist and intellectual, who was assassinated by unknown murderers.

Biography

Aksoy was born 1917 in İbradı, Antalya Province to the member of the Ottoman parliament Numan Aksoy.[1] After his graduation from the Law School at Istanbul University in 1939, he earned 1950 his Doctor of Law degree in the Faculty of Law and State Sciences at the University of Zurich. Returned to Turkey, he worked as an assistant in commercial law at Istanbul University and then as an associate professor in civil law at Ankara University.

Muammer Aksoy quit his post in 1957 because he felt that the newly enacted university law would limit the academic liberty at the university, and entered his political life by joining the Republican People's Party (CHP). After the military coup in 1960, he returned to Ankara University to lecture constitutional law and collaborated on the preparation the Constitution of 1961. Aksoy was elected in 1977 deputy of Istanbul from CHP. He served as the Turkish delegate to the European Council. After the military coup in 1980, Muammer Aksoy was elected President of the Bar association of Ankara. He was also president of the Turkish Law Institution for 15 years. In 1989, he co-founded with some other intellectuals the Kemalist Thought Association, and served as the founding chairman. Aksoy also wrote column for the leftist newspaper Cumhuriyet.

Since 1950, he was an energetic defender of Atatürk's reforms, democracy and laicism. He campaigned for the nationalization of the strategic natural resources as petroleum, coal and borax.

Muammer Aksoy was murdered in the evening of January 31, 1990 in front of his home in the Bahçelievler neighborhood of Ankara. The assassination was owned by then unknown militant organizations "İslami Hareket" (Islamic Movement) and "İslami İntikam" (Islamic Revenge).[2] The renowned investigative journalist Uğur Mumcu, a student of him, who bore his photo in front of the funeral procession, was also assassinated three years later.[3] His colleague and co-founder of the Kemalist Thoughts Association, Bahriye Üçok shared the same, fatal fate eight months later.

Muammer Aksoy is survived by his wife and two children.

Bibliography

[4]

References

  1. Biography Net (Turkish)
  2. BelgeNet (Turkish)
  3. Muammer Aksoy (Turkish)
  4. NetBook (Turkish)
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