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  • Turkey's new penal code strikes a liberal note

    Financial Times, UK
    March 30 2005


    Turkey's new penal code strikes a liberal note
    By Vincent Boland
    Published: March 30 2005 03:00 |

    Turkey's new penal code,a cornerstone of the government's drive
    toward European Union membership, comes into force tomorrow, aiming
    to introduce a more liberal and less punitive criminal justice
    system.

    The revised code, replacing one dating from the 1920s, gives greater
    recognition to the rights of individuals. Human rights groups say it
    contains many progressive measures, including stiffer penalties for
    torture and abuses of civil and human rights, and more protection for
    women and children.

    But the new code also illustrates the difficulties this
    rigidly-governed country faces in balancing individual rights against
    the protection of the state.

    The code includes terms of imprisonment for "insulting" the state and
    its institutions, which human rights groups say are inappropriate for
    a country seeking to become a liberal democracy acceptable to other
    EU states.

    Burak Bekdil, a newspaper columnist, quipped recently: "Soon, under
    the new penal code, it will be an offence to call a bald man a bald
    man."

    Among the issues that could land journalists in jail, should a
    prosecutor take exception to something they write, are any calls for
    the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus or support for claims of
    the genocide of Armenians.

    Already, Turkey's press council and Amnesty International have called
    for some articles in the new code to be revised, fearing they
    represent a threat to press freedom.

    In addition, the code will face a stiff test of its credibility,
    since much depends on how it is implemented by the courts and how the
    police, perhaps the most incorrigible and politicised arm of the
    bureaucracy, modifies its behaviour in accordance with the new rules.

    The process of revising the old penal code demonstrated how haphazard
    Turkey's reform process can be.

    When the revisions were being debated last summer, the government
    found itself engulfed in a row following a proposal from Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, the prime minister, to make adultery a criminal offence,
    deflecting public attention from other measures in the code.

    The government also often ordered changes without consulting civil
    rights and other interest groups. The entire package was then rushed
    for approval by parliament in time to meet a December 17 deadline
    imposed by the EU.

    Those flaws were highlighted last week by Amnesty International,
    which said EU pressure led to "insufficient consultation with members
    of civil society" and "may have contributed to the continuing
    problems in the law."

    Nevertheless, constitutional scholars say the revised code is a good
    first building block for a modern system of criminal justice.

    Ergun Ozbudun, a professor of constitutional law at Bilkent
    University, says the new code, and a series of amendments to the
    constitution in the past few years, including the formal abolition of
    the death penalty, have created a more progressive legal climate that
    substantially meets European Union standards.

    "The penal code is our basic criminal law, and having a more liberal
    law is a step in the right direction," he says.

    Diplomats agree, but add that the important issue after the revised
    code comes into force will be how it is implemented.

    Ensuring the implementation of a variety of reforms already approved
    by parliament is proving difficult, and is a particular focus of
    scrutiny by the EU and civil and human rights groups.

    The sight of police officers beating women demonstrators at a rally
    in Istanbul this month, almost under the eyes of a visiting Brussels
    delegation, has also cast the spotlight on how the revised penal code
    will reform policing and the public perception of the police.

    Mustafa Aydin, an academic at Ankara University, says many of the
    reforms Turkey has undertaken or plans to undertake, such as changes
    to the penal code, affect the police.

    He fears there may be resentment among officers about how these
    reforms restrict their traditional ways of working, such as the
    frequent use of force against demonstrators.

    Mr Aydin says that only a firm commitment from the top levels of
    government to impose changes on how police operate will ensure
    change.

    "Turkish police are bullies, but they could easily be bullied
    themselves if someone slammed his fist on the table and started
    ordering them about," he says.
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