The Turkish Parliament's biographical record for Irmak is concise, indicating that she has completed high school and is currently single.[1] It was while she was studying to be a teacher at the Selçuk University in Konya, when she was arrested for the first time.[2]
Political career and legal prosecution
In the 1990s, she spent almost ten years in prison on charges of membership of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).
She was for several years a co-chair of the Democratic Society Party (DTP).[3] In October 2008, she was sentenced to six months' imprisonment for praising crimes and criminals. The court sentence was later commuted to a fine of 5,000 Turkish lira.[4]
She stood for mayor for Derik in the 29 March 2009 local elections. On 18 April 2009, while still co-chair of the DTP, she was again arrested in a police operation in Mardin, and detained in Diyarbakır E Type Prison on charges of membership of a terrorist organization.[5] DTP members were targeted with large-scale arrests in April 2009.[6]
She was being tried alongside 175 other Kurdish politicians and political activists in the so-called mass 'KCK trial', which began in October 2010.[7] In 2011 she was elected as a member of Parliament representing the Sırnak province,[8] but due to her arrest she could not be sworn in.[9] The court ruled that the parliamentary immunity, which usually all Turkish Member of Parliaments have, does not apply in her case. Politicians from the Labour, Democracy and Freedom Block and other organizations protested against this ruling.[10]
In February 2012, she went on hunger strike along with many other fellow detainees and released a statement in support for Abdullah Öcalan.[11]
On the 4 November 2016 she was arrested upon terrorist charges.[17] While the prosecution demanded more than 52 years imprisonment the court sentenced her in November 2017 to 10 years in prison for leading the PKK[18] and being a member of a terrorist organization and disseminating terrorist propaganda.[19] In March 2018 the sentence was upheld by a court in Gaziantep,[20] and in the same year in April she was dismissed from Parliament.[21] On the 15 January 2019 she declared she will join Leyla Güven in her hunger strike demanding better detention conditions for Abdullah Öcalan.[14] The State Prosecutor at the Court of Cassation in Turkey Bekir Şahin filed a lawsuit before the Constitutional Court on the 17 March 2021, asking for Irmak and 686 other HDP politicians a five-year ban to engage in political activities.[22] Şahin filed the lawsuit jointly with a request for the HDP to be shut down arguing that there is no difference between the PKK and the HDP.[23][22]