rally at their university campus in May 2019.The group had been charged with "refusing to disperse" after they were arrested at the march by police, who used tear gas.Defence lawyer Öykü Didem Aydin welcomed the ruling and said that "the law has been respected"."All this should never have happened," he added to AFP after the eighteen students and one academic were released from custody in Ankara.The students were from the prestigious Middle East Technical University (ODTU) and could have faced up to three years in prison."In its decision, the court ruled that one person should be fined for insulting the police and the other defendants were acquitted because there was no criminal element," Amnesty International Turkey said on Friday.The.