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Turkish Prime Minister Defends Law Criminalizing Insults Against Tur

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  • Turkish Prime Minister Defends Law Criminalizing Insults Against Tur

    TURKISH PRIME MINISTER DEFENDS LAW CRIMINALIZING INSULTS AGAINST TURKEY

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 26, 2006 Tuesday

    Turkey's prime minister defended a law that makes it a crime to
    insult "Turkishness" or Turkish officials on Tuesday, saying European
    countries had similar laws and politicians did not have to stand for
    being targets of abuse.

    "Yes to criticism, no to insult," Erdogan told parliament on Tuesday
    while talking about article 301 of the penal code, which the European
    Union insists must be changed or abolished because it limits free
    expression in this EU candidate country.

    Despite a rash of prominent court cases using article 301 against
    authors, academics and journalists, however, Turkish politicians have
    been reluctant to amend the law, saying it needs more time to be tested
    and that the problems are in implementation, not with the law itself.

    Erdogan makes a distinction between criticism, which he says is
    democratic and acceptable, and insult, which he says is not. His
    lawyers regularly open court cases against journalists who allegedly
    insult him.

    "Is a politician this country's whipping child?" he asked rhetorically
    on Tuesday. "There are those circles who mix up criticism and insult."

    The prime minister added, however, that his government would consider
    changing the law as long as the changes ensured it still protected
    against insults.

    "Just like in European countries, this law stems from need. If in
    the end it emerges that there is a problem in implementation which,
    while stopping the crime (insults), also limits legitimate rights
    and freedoms, then we will amend the law in the necessary way. We
    are open to concrete suggestions on this subject."

    Most of the charges brought using article 301, including those against
    leading Turkish novelists Orhan Pamuk and Elif Shafak, have not led
    to convictions, but European Union officials argue even the threat
    of legal action limits free expression.

    The law is frequently invoked by nationalist lawyers against those
    who suggest that Turks were guilty of genocide against Armenians.

    On Monday, Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink was charged with
    "insulting Turkishness" for saying bluntly that Armenians were victims
    of genocide. Dink faces up to three years in prison if convicted.
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