Turkey has imposed a three-month state of emergency and temporarily suspended the European Convention on Human Rights as the government continues to crack down on dissent in the wake of last week’s failed military coup.

Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said Turkey would follow France’s lead on responding to issues of national security. The suspension was announced Thursday amid escalating concerns that President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan would try to use the uprising to curtail civil liberties and human rights.

The state of emergency allows the president and the cabinet to rule largely by decree, bypassing Parliament to restrict or block freedoms as they deem necessary. That may include imposing curfews, conducting unwarranted searches, banning gatherings or protests, or restricting media.

As the BBC‘s Turkey correspondent Mark Lowen explains:

In a televised address on Wednesday, Erdoğan said he “would like to underline that the declaration of the state of emergency has the sole purpose of taking the necessary measures, in the face of the terrorist threat that our country is facing.”

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