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  • EU report could help promote press freedom, says RSF

    International Freedom of Expression eXpress IFEX, Canada
    Nov 11 2006


    CAPSULE REPORT: EU report could help promote press freedom, says RSF


    Français: RAPPORT CAPSULE: Un rapport de l'UE pourrait faire avancer
    la liberté d'expression, selon RSF
    Country/Topic: Turkey
    Date: 10 November 2006
    Source: Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
    Person(s):
    Target(s):
    Type(s) of violation(s):
    Urgency: Bulletin
    (RSF/IFEX) - The following is a 9 November 2006 RSF press release:


    EU criticises Turkish penal code article under which 65 people have
    been prosecuted

    The latest European Commission report on Turkey's progress in its
    negotiations to join the EU, together with recent comments by Prime
    Minister Erdogan, have revived hopes of amendments to the parts of
    the Turkish penal code that most violate freedom of expression.

    Reporters Without Borders today welcomed a report on EU enlargement
    which the European Commission issued yesterday, saying it could help
    to promote press freedom in Turkey. While conditioning further
    membership talks on Turkey's respecting all of its commitments on
    Cyprus, the report clearly says in point 11 that "significant further
    efforts are needed, in particular on freedom of expression."

    Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which penalises "humiliating
    Turkish identity, the republic, and the organs and institutions of
    the state," is specifically mentioned in the report. The conclusions
    say: "freedom of expression in line with European standards is not
    yet guaranteed by the present legal framework (. . .). Article 301
    and other provisions of the Turkish penal code that restrict freedom
    of expression need to be brought in line with the European Convention
    of Human Rights (ECHR)."

    Reporters Without Borders said: "We can only endorse these
    conclusions, as Article 301 allows the law to be used to control the
    activity of the media. The proof is in the fact that 65 people,
    including many journalists and writers, have been prosecuted in
    Turkey since it took effect on 1 June 2005. Turkey's laws must meet
    European standards as regards basic freedoms such as freedom of
    expression."

    The trials of several intellectuals - novelists Orhan Pamuk and Elif
    Shafak, the journalist of Armenian origin Hrant Dink, and five
    columnists with the leading dailies "Milliyet" and "Radikal" (Erol
    Katircioglu, Murat Belge, Haluk Sahin, Hasan Cemal and Smet Berkan) -
    gave rise to scenes of violence between their supporters and
    supporters of the ultra-nationalist lawyers' union that brought the
    complaints against Pamuk and Shafak.

    Not only do the Turkish courts interpret Article 301 in the most
    draconian manner, but they also fail to apply Section 4 of the
    article, which stipulates that "expression of thought in the form of
    criticism cannot be penalised."

    The Turkish government and society are split on this issue. Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and Development Party has not
    heeded the criticism and warnings coming from press freedom groups
    and civil society for the past two years.

    But Erdogan finally took a position on the issue in the run-up to the
    publication of the EU report and after the protests around Shafak's
    trial and the awarding of the Nobel prize for literature to Pamuk. He
    met with representatives of trade unions and medical associations,
    including the Revolutionary Confederation of Workers Unions (Disk)
    and the Turkish Confederation of Employers Unions (Tisk), on 5
    November in Istanbul to discuss the possibility of amending Article
    301.

    After the meeting, he said he was ready to receive proposals designed
    to make the article more concrete "if problems exist due to the fact
    that it is abstract." He added that, "we will look at options in line
    with the spirit of the reforms in the Article 301 framework."

    This pleased EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn of Finland. He
    said he was "satisfied by Erdogan's personal commitment to freedom of
    expression and to his country's participation in the EU," adding
    that, "we are waiting for this intention to be supported by concrete
    steps and for concrete decisions to be taken."

    Several journalists who have been convicted under Article 301 say
    they will appeal the decision to the European Court of Human Rights
    on the grounds that it violates Article 10 of the Convention. Among
    the journalists are Dink, publisher of the Armenian weekly "Agos",
    who was given a suspended sentence of six months in prison on 7
    October 2005 for a series of articles entitled "Armenian Identity",
    as well as Burak Bekdil, a columnist for the English-language
    "Turkish Daily News", who received a 20-month suspended sentence -
    upheld by the highest appeal court in October 2005 - for a column
    dealing with the lack of confidence of Turkish citizens in their
    judicial system.

    Meanwhile, lawyer Eren Keskin, former president of the Istanbul
    branch of the Human Rights Association (IHD), faces prison for
    refusing to pay a fine of about 3,300 euros for comments she made in
    Cologne in 2002, implicating Turkish security forces in a number of
    rape cases in the mainly-Kurdish area of southeast Anatolia.

    "I will not pay this fine to buy my freedom," she has been quoted as
    saying.

    Article 301, entitled "Humiliation of Turkish identity, the republic,
    and the organs and institutions of the state", makes "humiliating the
    government and judicial organs of the state or the police or military
    structures" punishable by six months to three years in prison.

    MORE INFORMATION:



    For further information, contact Elsa Vidal at RSF, 5, rue Geoffroy
    Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 67, fax: +33 1 45 23
    11 51, e-mail: [email protected], Internet: http://www.rsf.org
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