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Turkish Intellectuals In Solidarity Campaign For Persecuted Writer

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  • Turkish Intellectuals In Solidarity Campaign For Persecuted Writer

    TURKISH INTELLECTUALS IN SOLIDARITY CAMPAIGN FOR PERSECUTED WRITER
    Submitted by Bill Weinberg

    World War 4 Report, NY
    Oct 9 2006

    The New York Times notes Oct. 6 that charges were dropped against
    Turkish novelist Elif Shafak, whose fictional character committed
    the crime of refering to the "Armenian genocide." But almost
    simultaneously, charges were brought against another writer, Hrant
    Dink, who dared to uphold historical truth. This Sept. 29 report
    from Turkey's BIA news agency indicates growing dissent among Turkish
    intellectuals:

    A number of leading Turkish intellectuals have launched a new
    civil disobedience action declaring themselves accomplices of
    Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink whose most recent prosecution in
    a series launched by Turkish courts is based on opinions he expressed
    in an interview with the Reuters news agency.

    The action comes in the wake of an Amnesty International (AI)
    statement on Dink that said the human rights watchdog organization
    was dismayed at recent reports that yet another case had been opened
    against Dink on charges of "denigrating Turkishness" under Article
    301 of the Turkish Penal Code.

    The AI warned that if Dink was arrested on any of the charges leveled
    against him, he would be declared a "Prisoner of Conscience" on the
    international arena.

    The latest charge against Dink was brought up following a statement
    he made to Reuters on July 14 in which he mentioned the massacre of
    Armenians during the Ottoman Empire. "Of course I'm saying it's a
    genocide" he said in the report. "Because its consequences show it
    to be true and label it so. We see that people who had lived on this
    soil for 4000 years were exterminated by these events."

    Civil disobedience underway

    Those launching this week's campaign in support of Dink from Turkey
    have issued a public statement where they accept participating in
    his offense subject to a new prosecution and request to be tried in
    the same case.

    Those who launched the statement were musician Sanar Yurdatapan,
    spokesman of the Initiative Against the Crime of Thought, lecturer
    Prof. Dr. Taner Akcam, teacher Erdal Yildirim, student Gulnur Elcik
    and editor-author Nihat Ates.

    But the statement is open for new signatories and expected to attract
    dozens or hundreds other, under the statement "I participate in Dink's
    remarks, I undersign them. I want to be a defendant in this case."

    The statement itself can be found at www.antenna-tr.org and those
    willing to sign it are asked to email [email protected]/

    Background of the case

    In reality issue to the case are not Dink's remarks reflected to
    the Reuters report but a 21 July 2006 news article in the weekly
    Armenian-Tukish Agos magazine that he runs. Subject to the original
    investigation was that news item and the remarks it contained.

    A nationalist group of lawyers known for filing complaints against
    Turkish intellectuals and writers, a group also held responsible for
    interrupting many court proceedings with physical violence and dub
    themselves now as the "Union of Grand Jurists," brought up the first
    criminal complaint against Dink on these remarks.

    As result, under article 301 of the Penal Code, a case was launched
    by the Istanbul Sisli Prosecutor's Office where both Dink and Serkis
    Seropyan, as executives of the newspapers, were put on trial.

    Amnesty concerned

    The recent civil disobedience action follows of a strongly worded
    statement by Amnesty International on the Hrant Dink case which was
    issued from London this week.

    AI said it considers that this new prosecution was "part of an emerging
    pattern of harassment against the journalist exercising his right to
    freedom of expression," noting that this is a right which Turkey,
    as a State Party to the European Convention for the Protection of
    Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the International Covenant
    on Civil and Political Rights, has a legal obligation to uphold.

    AI's statement said that the rights monitoring group was "particularly
    concerned at this latest prosecution, the third against Hrant Dink on
    charges under Article 301, because it seems to constitute a pattern
    of judicial harassment against the writer for peacefully expressing
    his dissenting opinion.

    "Furthermore, he has already been given a six-month suspended
    prison sentence following an October 2005 conviction on charges of
    'denigrating Turkishness' (upheld by the Court of Appeal in July
    2006), and therefore if found guilty again on the same charge would
    be imprisoned. Should he be, Amnesty International would consider
    him a prisoner of conscience," it explained.

    The Amnesty International statement also said that it considers this
    latest prosecution to be "particularly disappointing following the
    welcome acquittal four days ago of another writer, novelist Elif Safak,
    on charges under Article 301 relating to statements made by characters
    in her novel The Bastard of Istanbul.

    "The organization had seen this as a positive step for freedom
    of expression in Turkey but fears this acquittal may prove to be
    the exception rather than the rule and demonstrates yet again the
    failure of certain members of the Turkish judiciary and prosecution to
    internalize international law, as required by Article 90 of the Turkish
    constitution. The organization reiterates its call for Article 301
    to be abolished in its entirety, thereby putting an end to arbitrary
    implementation of this ill-defined law."

    The statement continued:

    "Finally, Amnesty International notes that this prosecution reportedly
    arises from a complaint lodged by elements of civil society opposed to
    the abolition of Article 301, who have lodged similar complaints in
    the past seeking to secure such prosecutions and who have repeatedly
    staged provocative and sometimes violent protests at trials, creating
    a threatening atmosphere in the courtroom. The organization calls
    on the Turkish authorities to ensure that all necessary measures are
    taken to ensure the protection both of the defendants, their lawyers
    and supporters in such cases, and of the course of justice itself."

    http://ww4report.com/node/2615
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