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ANKARA: Gov't Launches Long-Awaited Drive To Amend 301

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  • ANKARA: Gov't Launches Long-Awaited Drive To Amend 301

    GOV'T LAUNCHES LONG-AWAITED DRIVE TO AMEND 301

    Today's Zaman
    April 8 2008
    Turkey

    After years of foot dragging, the government eventually submitted a
    proposal to Parliament to amend Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code
    (TCK), stipulating that future prosecution under the infamous law
    will require permission from the president.

    Government spokesman Cemil Cicek, speaking after a Cabinet meeting,
    said the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) was ready
    to ask Parliament for amendments to Article 301, which has been used
    in the prosecution of intellectuals, journalists and activists for
    "insulting Turkishness." It was not immediately clear when the
    Parliament would vote on the bill.

    The law has been subject to harsh criticism from the European Union,
    which says it restricts free speech; Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning
    novelist Orhan Pamuk has been tried under Article 301, and journalist
    Hrant Dink, tried and convicted under the same law, was killed in
    2007 by a teenage hitman who said he had killed the ethnic Armenian
    editor for insulting Turks. But the government's unwillingness
    to change Article 301 despite more than two years of mounting EU
    and domestic calls has proven to be a major obstacle for progress
    in Turkey's EU accession process and led to questions over the AK
    Party rule's commitment to reform. The government's eventual step to
    change Article 301 comes amid mounting pressure from its staunchly
    secularist opponents at home, who filed a closure case against the AK
    Party on charges of becoming a focal point for anti-secular activities
    last month.

    The AK Party appears to have decided to strike back with a package of
    reforms, including those long sought by the EU, as well as a couple
    of constitutional amendments to make party closures more difficult.

    One of the major amendments proposed by the AK Party states that
    future prosecution under Article 301 will require permission from the
    president. Earlier proposals said the permission should be issued by
    the justice minister or by a committee of specialists. "The predominant
    inclination among the AK Party is that president's permission should
    be sought," Cicek told reporters.

    He explained that the president would decide not on whether the
    alleged crime has been committed or not but on whether such a court
    trial would be in the public interest or not.

    Cicek also said some changes are planned in the text of the article
    in accordance with proposals from legal specialists. The text of
    the law is expected to be changed to stipulate that "insulting the
    Turkish Republic" will be criminalized, instead of the vague notion
    of "insulting Turkishness." The maximum prison term, currently three
    years, is also expected to be reduced to two years to make it difficult
    for those prosecuted under Article 301 to serve jail time.

    The TCK states that prison sentences of up to two years can be commuted
    to suspended sentences.

    Reform package

    The government has dismissed reports that it is preparing a special
    package of reforms to save the party from closure, saying instead
    that its efforts are guided by a national program for EU-inspired
    reforms that Turkey is preparing to set out what reform steps will
    be taken when.

    "We are currently preparing a national program. It will set out the
    short-term, medium-term and long-term reform priorities for Turkey,"
    Babacan told reporters at a joint press conference with visiting
    Laotian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Thongloun
    Sisoulith. "It will also set out a calendar for us for political
    reforms."

    Asked to comment on reports that the Prime Ministry's
    Secretariat-General for EU Affairs has drafted a list of reforms that
    should be passed immediately, Cicek said the government had no list
    of priorities. "Our commitments stem from the national program," he
    said. The national program will be released mid-year and will specify
    which reforms will be carried out before the current legislative year
    in Parliament ends in three months and which ones will be delayed to
    the next legislative session, said Babacan.

    The AK Party's efforts to reform Article 301 are unlikely to receive
    support from the two main opposition parties, namely the Republican
    People's Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP),
    but the ruling party has enough members in Parliament to pass the
    changes alone.

    Media reports say the MHP will lobby against amendments to Article
    301 and has allocated some $2 million to fund lobbying efforts.

    Babacan said the government was determined to go ahead with reforms
    despite objections that might arise.

    "We are determined on the issue of reforms. No matter how hard they
    are, we believe reforms are important for Turkey's future. They are
    important for the expansion of basic rights and freedoms and the
    deepening of democracy," he said.
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