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When the pen is threatened by the sword

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  • When the pen is threatened by the sword

    When the pen is threatened by the sword

    Sunday Herald, UK
    July 23, 2006

    Trevor Royle on Turkey's persecution of its writers

    WritersÊmakeÊhandy scapegoats when despotic regimes decide to defend
    the indefensible and in so doingÊmakeÊthemselvesÊlook utterly
    ridiculous.ÊBeingÊindependent&#x CA;and working largely in isolation,
    authors are soft targets and despite the excellent work undertaken
    by organisations such as International Pen and Sara Whyatt's Writers
    in Prison Committee, far too many of their kind are being banged
    up all over the world for the crime of daring to speak their mind.
    The latest victim is the Turkish writer Perihan Magden who will appear
    this week before a court in Sultanhamet, Istanbul on charges that she
    turned people against military serviceÓ. For the crime of insisting
    that conscientious objection to military service is a human right
    all Turkish men are subjected to 15 months compulsory service in
    the armed forces Ð she faces three years imprisonment in conditions
    which will be pretty grim. As the movie Midnight Express showed all
    too vividly, Turkish jails are not for the squeamish.

    Best known for her novels 2 Girls and The Messenger Boy Murders,
    Magden is no stranger to controversy and has been praised by the
    leading Turkish author Orhan Pamuk for her Òcombative independence and
    steely conscienceÓ. Pamuk knows what he is talking about Ð earlier
    this year he, too, faced prosecution, in his case for allegedly
    insulting TurkishnessÓ. He only escaped on a technicality.

    What makes these cases more worrying is that they are neither
    isolated nor unusual and are usually prompted by the military
    authorities. Around 80 Turkish writers are currently facing prosecution
    on a variety of charges ranging from insulting the state to questioning
    government policy.

    The trials have also been accompaniedÊbyÊaÊfairÊdegree&# xCA;ofÊgratuitous
    ^_violence. Witnesses and the judiciary have been intimidated by
    braying mobs inside and outside the courts and in one case, the trial
    of Armenian Turkish ^_editor Hrant Dink, there were reports of an
    attempted lynching. All this makes for disquieting reading at a time
    when Turkey is on the verge of becoming a member of the European Union.

    There have already been numerous complaintsÊaboutÊTurkey'sÊhuman rights
    record and its refusal to allow freedom of expression. Questions have
    also been asked about the extent to which the Turkish military has
    a free rein and seems to exist outside government control. Coming on
    top of existing concerns about the influence of Islamic fundamentalism
    within the country and the prosecution of the Kurdish ^_population,
    it's not difficult to see why theÊwriters'ÊtrialsÊareÊcausin gÊsoÊmuch
    ^_dismay in the literary community.

    In the wider scheme of things there are in fact very few reasons to
    deny Turkey membership of the EU. Since the 1920s, when the founder
    of modern Turkey Kemal Atat~_rk separated religion from the state,
    Turks have longed to be part of Europe. And let's not forget, in
    the days of the Ottoman Empire they ruled most of southeast Europe,
    and as far north as the Balkans.

    Clerics have no political role, religious parties can and
    have been outlawed,ÊtheÊeducationÊsystem&#xCA ;is ^_secular
    and Turkey has emerged as a modern and vibrant country
    with much to offer its EuropeanÊneighbours.ÊThat'sÊwhat
    ma kes the prosecution of the Turkish writers all the more
    disappointing. No countryÊaspiringÊtoÊbeÊconside red civilised
    should prosecute people for expressing opinions that go against
    the grain;ÊtheÊpreservationÊofÊart isticÊand ^_literary freedoms are
    central to any democracy.

    By offering the hand of friendship to Turkey last autumn the EU
    acknowledged that Islam is central to Europe's identity and not a
    persecuted minority. Now,ÊmoreÊthanÊever,ÊTurkey&#x CA;must reciprocate by
    ending these preposterous prosecutions.

    --Boundary_(ID_UP+CtgFWG2MVaRjP5yzG cw)--
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