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Amnesty Int'l: Turkey: Concerns about new Penal Code should beaddres

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  • Amnesty Int'l: Turkey: Concerns about new Penal Code should beaddres

    Amnesty International USA
    March 24 2005

    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

    Public Statement

    AI Index: EUR 44/011/2005 (Public)
    News Service No: 072
    23 March 2005

    Turkey: Concerns about new Penal Code should be addressed


    In recent days, press groups in Turkey have articulated their concerns
    regarding the new Penal Code which is due to come into effect on 1
    April. Professional bodies such as the Press Council and Society
    of Turkish Journalists have called on the government to urgently
    review the new law which they are concerned will restrict press
    freedom. Justice Minister Cemil Cicek has stated that the government
    may review the legislation. Amnesty International shares these concerns
    and urges the government to take further steps to bring Turkish law
    into line with international human rights law and standards related
    to freedom of expression.

    While the new Penal Code has introduced many positive changes - most
    notably in the removal of gender-discriminatory articles - it still
    contains numerous restrictions on fundamental rights. Some provisions,
    which the authorities had used before to breach international standards
    related to freedom of expression, were carried over from the old Penal
    Code. For example, Article 159 which criminalized acts that "insult or
    belittle" various state institutions, and which Amnesty International
    has repeatedly called for to be abolished, reappears as Article 301
    of the new Penal Code in the section entitled "Crimes against symbols
    of the states sovereignty and the honour of its organs" (Articles 299
    - 301). Amnesty International is concerned that this section could
    be used to criminalize legitimate expression of dissent and opinion.

    In other cases, new articles have been introduced which appear to
    introduce new restrictions to fundamental rights. For example, Article
    305 of the new Penal Code criminalizes "acts against the fundamental
    national interest". The written explanation attached to the draft,
    when the law passed through Parliament, provided as examples of
    crimes such acts as "making propaganda for the withdrawal of Turkish
    soldiers from Cyprus or for the acceptance of a settlement in this
    issue detrimental to Turkey... or, contrary to historical truths, that
    the Armenians suffered a genocide after the First World War". Amnesty
    International considers that the imposition of a criminal penalty for
    any such statements - unless intended or likely to incite imminent
    violence - would be a clear breach of international standards related
    to freedom of expression

    Many of the provisions in the new law envisage higher sentences if
    the "crime" has been perpetrated through the press and raise the
    possibility of custodial sentences for journalists. Chair of the
    Press Council Oktay Eksi has evaluated the new law as "an unfortunate
    reversal from the point of freedom of expression and of the press".

    Background:

    The new Penal Code was presented by the government as a less
    restrictive and democratic piece of legislation and hastily passed
    by Parliament in September 2004 as a result of pressure from the
    European Union. This pressure appears to have resulted in insufficient
    consultation with members of civil society, such as press and human
    rights groups, and may have contributed to the continuing problems
    in the law.

    Amnesty International is also concerned about aspects of the Penal
    Code which are related to areas other than freedom of expression. For
    example, Article 122 of the draft of the new Penal Code which forbids
    discrimination on the basis of "language, race, colour, gender,
    political thought, philosophical belief, religion, denomination
    and other reasons" was amended at the last moment so that "sexual
    orientation" was removed from the draft. Amnesty International is
    therefore concerned that discrimination on the basis of sexuality
    was therefore not criminalized in the new law.

    In addition, Amnesty International is concerned that the statute
    of limitations (the time limit) still applies in trials in which
    individuals are accused of torture. While the new law has extended
    this time limit, trials against alleged torturers are frequently
    deliberately delayed and therefore dropped through this provision
    thereby contributing towards a climate of impunity. Given the frequency
    with which this happens and the status of torture as a peremptory norm
    of general international law, Amnesty International considers that
    there should be no statute of limitations for the crime of torture.
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