But on April 12, Marco's holiday turned into a nightmare.
Turkish police officers arrested him for having sex with a 13-year-old Briton,
known in German media as Charlotte M. The mother of the Manchester girl had
accused Marco of sexually abusing her daughter after he had been invited up to
the girl's hotel room.
Marco claims Charlotte told him she was fifteen and what has emerged in the
German media is a portrait of a manipulative 13-year-old deceiving a youth four
years her senior.
Turkey has also been lambasted by the tabloids, commentators and politicians
for its treatment of a juvenile. Much has been made of Marco's psychological
state and the decrepit conditions of the detention cell, which he has been
sharing with 30 other inmates for the past four months.
German politicians have intervened on Marco's behalf at the highest levels.
Chancellor Angela Merkel made public assurances that she would help Marco and
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke privately to his Turkish
counterpart, Abdullah Gül, who is likely to be elected Turkey's next president
at the end of this month. Gül said that he could not interfere with Turkey's
independent judiciary.
Different stories
Marco claims the two only kissed and engaged in "heavy petting," consensually.
No sexual intercourse took place, he has said.
On Aug. 8, a gynecologist who had examined Charlotte said that there was no
evidence of assault and the girl was still a virgin. But there was sexual
penetration, insisted Charlotte's lawyer Ömer Aycan, who told his client's side
of the story in a telephone interview with DW-WORLD.DE from Antalya.
Charlotte has claimed that she was asleep in the double room when Marco and
another boy knocked on the door after midnight. She asked Marco to leave, but
he refused and proceeded to force himself on her. Charlotte screamed, alerting
other teenagers in the room, and Marco fled.
"Charlotte refused to have sex with Marco, so I can use the word rape. He raped
a 13-year-old girl," said Aycan, who added that Charlotte's age was known to
the German youth.
Sexual contact without the use of force is criminal under Turkish law when one
of the individuals involved is under 15. Aycan is seeking the maximum
conviction, a sentence of fifteen years, although that penalty would be reduced
by a third since Marco is also a minor.
Statutory rape laws
The case has thrust Turkey's judicial system in the spotlight and reinforced
the German perception that the predominantly Muslim country is backward in its
sexual attitudes, and therefore does not belong in the European Union.
But legal experts say that Turkey has made tremendous strides in bringing its
laws in line with EU norms, and the case would have been handled no differently
in Germany, England or the US.
"The mother of the girl charged a young man with child abuse. The prosecutors
had no choice but to arrest Marco," said Christian Rumpf, an attorney in
Stuttgart who is an expert on Turkish law.
In Turkey as in Germany, any foreigner charged with a crime must remain in
detention until cleared of the charges, said Rumpf, who does not believe that
Marco will be easily acquitted.
The law governing sex with underage minors, or "statutory rape," is taken
seriously in Turkey and other countries. The legal "age of consent" for sex can
range from 14 to 18 years, depending on country or even different regions of
the same country. The law is meant to protect children and adolescents from
being coerced by an older individual into having sex, but also applies to
sexual activity between teens of similar ages.
"Where do you draw the line between the normal sexuality of teenagers and
protecting a child from sexual abuse?" asked Rumpf.
Germany would have prosecuted too
In Germany, that line is drawn at age 14.
"Kissing is not a felony in Germany at any age, if that is all they did. But
sexual contact is illegal in Germany when one of them is under 14," said
Heribert Ostendorf, a former federal prosecutor who heads the program for
juvenile law and crime prevention at the University of Kiel.
"Most people just don't know the specifics of child-abuse laws in Germany and
that Marco would have also been prosecuted in his own country," he said, adding
that the burden is on Marco to prove that he did not know that Charlotte was
only 13.
"Ignorance of the law is no protection from being punished by it," he said.
"There are only victims in this case"
The case has resulted in a media circus and Charlotte's family has been hounded
by German reporters in Manchester. The girl did not show up for the last
hearing because of the publicity glare, according to Aycan.
"There are only victims in this case -- Marco, Charlotte, and even the Turkish
justice system, which is facing intense scrutiny from Germany, Britain and the
EU. The Turkish judges are under tremendous pressure and cannot afford to make
mistakes," said Lale Akgün, a Turkish-born Social Democratic parliamentarian in
the German Bundestag who served for many years as a family and youth counselor
for the city of Cologne.
Akgün also believes the case has been damaging for German-Turkish relations.
News commentators in Turkey were outraged that German politicians tried to
influence a matter that belongs in the courts.
"The intervention of Steinmeier has put even more pressure on the Turkish
judiciary to prove that it is capable of making independent decisions without
being swayed by politics," she said.
Parallels in the US
In the United States, former President Jimmy Carter and Democratic presidential
hopeful Barack Obama unsuccessfully lobbied Georgia's high court to overturn
the conviction of Genarlow Wilson, who is serving a ten-year jail sentence for
having oral sex with his girlfriend.
The girl never filed charges, but the act was caught on videotape at a New
Year's Eve party in 2003, and wound up in the hands of Georgia state
prosecutors. In Georgia, the age of consent is 16 years of age. Wilson was 17
at the time, but his girlfriend was only 15. He was charged and convicted of
child molestation.
The Wilson case has gotten wide publicity in the United States, and many
Americans are now questioning whether the statutory rape laws that are meant to
protect minors go too far.
In June, an appeal courts judge called Wilson's prison term "a grave
miscarriage of justice," but the former star athlete still remains behind bars.
Meanwhile Marco's next trial date in Antalya is on September 6. The judicial
process in this instanced is not unusually long, considering the backlog of
cases in Turkish courts and the time required to depose witnesses in three
different countries, according to Christian Rumpf.
"We need to let the Turkish courts do their job and do it right," said Lale
Akgün. "This takes time."