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Turkish court acquits author of charges of turning people v mil. svc

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  • Turkish court acquits author of charges of turning people v mil. svc

    AZ Central.com, AZ
    July 27, 2006

    Turkish court acquits author of charges of turning people against
    military service



    ANKARA, Turkey - A Turkish writer was acquitted Thursday of turning
    people against military service by defending a conscientious objector
    in her weekly magazine column. Human rights groups hailed the
    decision as a victory for freedom of expression in Turkey.

    A court in Istanbul ruled that Perihan Magden's article amounted to
    "heavy criticism conveyed within the scope of freedom of expression"
    and did not constitute a crime.

    Turkish authorities have put a string of Turkish writers and
    journalists on trial for expressing opinions, despite pressure from
    the European Union - which Turkey hopes to join - to scrap repressive
    laws. advertisement

    Author Elif Safak, a University of Arizona assistant professor, was
    recently charged with "insulting Turkishness" based on the lines
    uttered by fictional Armenian characters in her novel "The Bastard of
    Istanbul."

    Magden is the second defendant to be acquitted in recent months. A
    court in November acquitted Internet journalist Rahmi Yildirim of
    charges of insulting the military.

    Magden faced up to three years in prison if convicted.

    In her column, published in the weekly Yeni Aktuel magazine in
    December, Magden defended conscientious objector Mehmet Tarhan, who
    was sentenced to a record four-year term in a military prison for
    disobedience after refusing to wear his military uniform. She argued
    that Turkey needed to establish a civilian service as an alternative
    to compulsory military conscription.

    Conscription in Turkey is obligatory for men over 20, and the country
    does not recognize the right to conscientious objection. Objectors
    also have been prosecuted on charges of turning people against the
    military.

    Rights groups praised Thursday's verdict.

    The lack of "press freedoms had become unbearable in recent months
    and put Turkey in a humiliating position," said Ahmet Abakay, the
    head of the Contemporary Journalists' Association.

    "I want to congratulate the judge who made this decision. It should
    be an example to other judges and prosecutors."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government has said it has no
    plans to change laws governing expression, saying that inappropriate
    charges are eventually dropped and defendants are acquitted.

    EU officials argue that even if the charges are dropped, the threat
    of prosecution remains a deterrent to people freely expressing their
    opinions.

    A Turkish court dropped charges last year against Orhan Pamuk, one of
    the country's most famous novelists, who faced trial on charges of
    insulting "Turkishness" for commenting on the mass killings of
    Armenians by Turks around the time of World War I. The charges were
    dropped for technical reasons amid intense international pressure.

    Earlier this month, a high court confirmed a six-month prison
    sentence imposed on Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for
    attempting to influence the judiciary after his newspaper ran
    articles criticizing the law that makes it a crime to insult
    Turkishness. Dink's sentence was postponed. (AP)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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