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  • WSJ: Turkish laws put to the test; Lawyer leads effort to prosecutec

    Turkish laws put to the test

    Lawyer leads effort to prosecute citizens critical of the state

    The Wall Street Journal
    March 14, 2006
    Page A6

    By PHILIP SHISHKIN

    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- Kemal Kerincsiz dreams of a day when Turkey will reclaim
    its Ottoman-era greatness, become a regional superpower and turn away from
    both the European Union and the U.S. But for now, the nationalist lawyer
    would be happy to see Hrant Dink thrown in jail.

    Last year, Mr. Dink, the editor of the Istanbul-based Armenian weekly Agos,
    was found guilty of denigrating the Turkish state in one of a string of
    cases instigated by Mr. Kerinsciz. The self-proclaimed defender of the
    Turkish state has dusted off old articles in the Turkish penal code to force
    prosecutors to put Mr. Dink and others on trial. Mr. Kerinsciz has
    instigated cases against Orhan Pamuk, an acclaimed Turkish novelist, and
    against the organizers of an academic conference. He has even tried, without
    success, to get a Dutch member of the European Parliament punished for
    criticizing Turkey's armed forces.

    The maverick lawyer's quest to restrict free speech has undermined Turkey's
    effort to burnish its democratic credentials, exposing the residue of the
    country's authoritarian past at a time when Ankara is trying to change its
    ways to join the EU. Mr. Kerincsiz is part of a nationalist movement that is
    trying to pull the country in the opposite direction and away from Western
    alliances -- with the U.S. as well as Europe.

    Mr. Kerincsiz's limited success, despite tireless efforts, suggests Turkey's
    civil-society movement has advanced. But critics say the country needs to do
    more to rid itself of archaic prosecutorial tools. "In our penal code, it's
    considered a crime to criticize the state, the army, the parliament," says
    Mr. Dink, the Armenian newspaper editor. "But in a modern democracy, you
    should be able to criticize these institutions."

    Moving Westward

    While Turkey faces at least a decade of tough negotiations before it can
    join the EU, the country already has changed many of its laws and traditions
    to conform with Europe's democratic requirements. Ankara has given greater
    civil rights to its ethnic minorities, abolished the death penalty, limited
    the role of the military in state affairs and shelved a law that would have
    criminalized adultery.

    Turkey is well along the path of political and economic integration with the
    West. Indeed, Turks in general favor closer ties to Europe: While opposition
    to the EU has increased, some 63.5% support EU membership, while 30% oppose
    it, according to a poll last year by the Pollmark agency. The nationalists
    aren't giving up without a fight, though, and they have succeeded in putting
    the government on the defensive.

    "We don't need the European Union -- it will divide us and hinder us from
    becoming a regional power," Mr. Kerincsiz says. Recalling how the Western
    powers divided the Ottoman Empire after World War I, in which the Turks
    fought and lost on the German side, he adds, "The West hasn't changed its
    policy toward Turkey since then."

    Eye on Elections

    With Turkey's next general election scheduled for 2007, the nationalists are
    appealing to anti-Western sentiment that is always present in parts of
    Turkey's mostly Muslim society. "The Valley of the Wolves, Iraq," a hit
    fictional movie released earlier this year, shows U.S. soldiers killing
    women and children at an Iraqi wedding, while a recent novel imagines a war
    between Turkey and the EU.

    Seven years ago, Mr. Kerincsiz founded an association of nationalist
    lawyers, whose membership has since grown to 800 members in Istanbul alone.
    The association's long-term goal: a Turkey-led confederation stretching from
    the former Ottoman provinces in the Balkans to the Turkic republics of
    Central Asia. "You have to have big goals in life," says Mr. Kerincsiz, a
    lanky and energetic 46-year-old who was an honors student in law school.

    But it is his immediate strategy -- prosecuting words and deeds he considers
    damaging to the Turkish republic -- that has pulled the association from the
    nationalist fringe into the center of a debate on what the modern Turkish
    state should look like. His first high-profile strike came last year when
    two Istanbul universities teamed up to organize a conference on Armenians in
    Turkey, one of the most controversial issues in the country's history.
    Armenia says the Ottoman government orchestrated a genocide of the Armenian
    population during World War I. Turkey denies that what took place was a
    genocide, arguing that thousands of Turks died too in a brutal conflict.

    Taking on Universities

    Mr. Kerincsiz, who says he doesn't recognize Armenia as an independent
    nation, complained to an Istanbul court, fearing the conference was a
    foreign plot to force Turkey to admit to a genocide, open the door to
    compensation claims and weaken the Turkish state. He urged the court to
    investigate the academic credentials of the participants and their sources
    of funding. The judges instructed the two universities to suspend the
    conference. The organizers eventually managed to hold the gathering by
    moving it to a school that wasn't covered by the ruling.

    The flap over the conference spawned a lively debate in the Turkish media.
    Murat Belge, a professor of comparative literature, wrote a column in the
    Radikal newspaper accusing the court of trampling the law by banning the
    academic gathering. To drive his point home, he recounted a disparaging joke
    about judges.

    Mr. Kerincsiz then got prosecutors to haul Mr. Belge, along with four other
    columnists, to court, claiming they had insulted the court. That, he said,
    would be a crime under Turkish laws banning the denigration of the state and
    its institutions. The laws date to the early days of the Turkish republic,
    when the government sought to strengthen the young state against separatist
    influences. The laws have never been removed from the books, though they are
    rarely enforced by the government.

    The court hearing last month quickly descended into chaos. Mr. Kerincsiz and
    his nationalist lawyers yelled at the judge and lashed out at the presence
    of foreign observers at the trial, participants said. The judge had to
    remove one unruly lawyer from the courtroom. "The irony is that our case
    starts with the premise that some people had insulted the court," Mr. Belge
    says.

    Image Problem

    Mr. Kerincsiz's most famous attack -- against Mr. Pamuk, for mentioning
    during an interview the killings of Armenians and Kurds in Turkey -- failed
    when the court dropped the case against the novelist.

    Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, has acknowledged anti-free-speech
    laws are tarnishing the country's image. Yet the government has shied away
    from changing any of them. And that has only encouraged Mr. Kerincsiz, who
    says he aims more for political impact than legal victories. His association
    has even joined a quixotic campaign to kick the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate
    out of Turkey, accusing it of attempts to set up a Vatican-style state
    within a state.

    For Mr. Dink, the Armenian newspaper editor, the consequences of Mr.
    Kerincsiz's nationalist quest aren't hypothetical. In 2004, Mr. Dink wrote
    an article urging Armenians "not to fight with the 'Turk' anymore" because
    the animosity creates poisoned blood. The nationalists read the article to
    mean that the Turkish blood itself is poisoned and took Mr. Dink to court.

    He received a six-month suspended sentence, which he appealed. When he
    criticized the judgment in print, the nationalists sued him again for
    insulting the court. "I'm going to leave the country if the higher court
    doesn't overturn the judgment," says Mr. Dink, who was born and raised in
    Turkey. Of Mr. Kerincsiz, he says: "He's always there trying to chase me."


    Write to Philip Shishkin at [email protected]
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114229835588897219 .html
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