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ANKARA: Murat Belge Still On Trial

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  • ANKARA: Murat Belge Still On Trial

    MURAT BELGE STILL ON TRIAL
    Erol Onderoglu

    BİA, Turkey
    April 12 2006

    Citing statue of limitation an Istanbul court dropped charges against
    four leading Turkish columnists tried for publicly criticizing court
    decision to halt an Istanbul conference on Armenian issue. But the
    case continues columnist Murat Belge.

    BİA (Istanbul) - An Istanbul court Tuesday dismissed a controversial
    case against four prominent Turkish columnists who were charged with
    attempting to influence the outcome of a trial though their writings by
    criticising a court order halting a September 2005 Istanbul conference
    on Ottoman Armenians.

    Journalists Hasan Cemal of the daily Milliyet and Haluk Sahin, Erol
    Katircioglu and Ismet Berkan of the daily Radikal were charged in
    December under Article 288 of the Turkish Penal Code with "attempting
    to influence the outcome of a fair trial" through their writing. All
    except Berkan also faced prosecution under Article 301 for "publicly
    degrading the judiciary". If convicted, they could have faced prison
    terms of six months to 10 years under the charges.

    The court decided that according to article 26 of the Press Law,
    charges against the four were subject to statue of limitation due to
    the time lapse between the date of alleged offence and when a case
    was launched.

    While it ruled to drop the charges against them, the court decided
    to continue the trial of Radikal newspaper columnist and writer Murat
    Belge as the only defendant in a new trial, concluding that the statue
    of limitation did not apply to his case.

    Complaining "lawyers" leave hall angered at "observer" status

    The trial which started in tension on 7 February due to the
    intervention of members of Hukukcular Birligi, a nationalist group
    of lawyers, who scuffled with the police, continued on a tense note
    this Tuesday with sorties from the same complainant attorneys.

    When the Bagcilar Number 2 Court of First Instance rejected the lawyer
    group's attempt to become the "intervening party", the lawyers refused
    to attend the trial as "observers" only and walked out of the hall.

    The court with the positive opinion by the prosecutor filed a criminal
    complaint to the Republic Chief Prosecutor's Office against the
    Hukukcular Birligi lawyers based on their remarks related to the trial
    and also lodged a separate complaint with the Istanbul Bar Association.

    According to reports from the prosecutor's office complaints were
    made to the Istanbul Bar Association also with regard to remarks
    related to the court contained in some defence attorney petitions.

    All cases dropped but that for Belge

    In Tuesday's hearing the court referred to article 26 of the Turkish
    Press Law where the Trial Period is defined and it is stated that
    "cases of crimes entailing the use of printed matter or other crimes
    mentioned in this law should be opened within a period of two months
    for daily periodicals and four months for other printed matter."

    Agreeing with the arguments brought forth by defense lawyers on 7
    February, the court dismissed the charges for the four defendants.

    But as a statue of limit was not applicable in Murat Belge's case,
    it decided for him to be tried separately under a new file and a new
    hearing date to be set.

    Non of the defendants were present at Tuesday's hearing where they
    were defended by a group of lawyers including Sehnaz Yuzer, Turgut
    Kazan, Bahri Bayram Belen, Gunay Erkan, Selin Ozuzun and Metin Aslan.

    On the intervening side were Kemal Kerincsiz and attorneys attached
    to the Hukukcular Birligi.

    In the previous hearing, the defendants and their attorneys had argued
    that criticism targeting the Administrative Court decision cancelling
    the Ottoman Armenian Conference could not be regarded in the scope of
    article 288 nor that criticising a court could fall within the scope
    of article 301. They stated then that defending scientific autonomy
    could not be accepted as an offence.

    RSF reacts to court case

    The Paris-based international press freedom organisation Reporters
    Without Borders (RSF) had issued a statement on the case in support
    of the columnists, criticising the trial as "a disgrace for press
    freedom and unworthy of a democratic state," asking for the charges
    to be dismissed.

    RSF also noted that the Hukukcular Birligi lawyers had reflected
    violence to the case while accusing the court of being biased and
    serving western observers. "The case was nearly resulting with a
    fiasco" the statement said. "Hanefi Aktas, a nationalist lawyer and
    member of a jurists' organisation, threatened the court and accused
    it of partiality and of backing European deputies, strongly opposed
    to the trial. Security forces had to intervene to remove him, after
    which order was restored in court."

    --Boundary_(ID_51ABh99Dsz65NpMAKSPMTw)--
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