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Turkey To Pass Free Speech Bill

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  • Turkey To Pass Free Speech Bill

    TURKEY TO PASS FREE SPEECH BILL

    The Times
    April 8 2008
    South Africa

    ANKARA - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said today
    that parliament would next week pass a long-awaited bill softening
    a controversial law which penalises "insulting Turkishness".

    "I believe we will push the amendment to Article 301 through parliament
    next week," Erdogan said in a televised address to the parliamentary
    group of his Justice and Development Party (AKP).

    Article 301 in the penal code allows for up to three years in jail for
    "insulting Turkishness" and has long been criticised as a threat to
    freedom of speech in both Turkey and the European Union, which Ankara
    hopes to join.

    The government submitted to parliament a draft amendment late on
    Monday, ahead of a visit by European Commission President Jose Manuel
    Barroso and EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, who will arrive
    here on Thursday.

    The proposal calls for the president's approval before prosecutors can
    launch cases, in a bid to make trials under the article more difficult.

    It also replaces the term "Turkishness" - which critics say is too
    broad and vague - with the "Turkish nation" and decreases the envisaged
    jail term to a maximum of two years, which would allow the sentence
    to be suspended or converted to a fine.

    It also removes a provision that calls for an increased sanction if
    the crime is committed abroad.

    The AKP is expected to have no difficulty in passing the amendment
    as it dominates the 550-seat parliament with 340 lawmakers.

    Dozens of intellectuals, including 2006 Nobel literature laureate
    Orhan Pamuk, have been tried under the provision and although some -
    including ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink who was murdered in
    January 2007 - were convicted, their sentences were suspended and no
    one has been jailed so far.

    The article has been used mainly against people contesting the
    official line on the World War I massacres of Armenians under the
    Ottoman Empire, which, much to Turkey's ire, many countries have
    recognised as genocide.
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