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Turkish Government Proposes Amendments To Law Limiting Freedom Of Sp

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  • Turkish Government Proposes Amendments To Law Limiting Freedom Of Sp

    TURKISH GOVERNMENT PROPOSES AMENDMENTS TO LAW LIMITING FREEDOM OF SPEECH

    Southeast European Times
    April 8 2008
    MD

    The Turkish government sent a proposal to parliament Monday aimed at
    softening a widely criticised law that curbs free speech.

    (Zaman, Turkish Daily News, Hurriyet, The New Anatolian, Sabah -
    08/04/08; AP, Bloomberg, DPA - 07/04/08)

    Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) submitted to
    parliament Monday (April 7th) draft legislation aimed at easing
    current restrictions on free speech.

    The proposal contains amendments to the controversial Article 301,
    which decrees jail sentences of three years or less for insulting
    "Turkishness".

    Prosecutors have used it to indict scores of prominent Turkish
    intellectuals, including Orhan Pamuk, the 2006 Nobel Literature
    Prize winner; Elif Safak, a prominent female writer; and Hrant Dink,
    the ethnic Armenian editor-in-chief of a Turkish-Armenian newspaper,
    Agos. Convicted of "insulting Turkishness", he was killed in January
    2007 by a Turk who cited that charge as his motive.

    Although most Article 301 trials have ended without a conviction,
    the EU and international rights groups have long urged Turkey to
    amend the law or scrap it altogether.

    The proposal was submitted to parliament ahead of visits by
    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and EU Enlargement
    Commissioner Olli Rehn later this week.

    It would require approval of any Article 301 prosecution by the
    president, rather than by the justice minister or an expert committee,
    as earlier envisioned. Currently, such cases can be filed directly
    with the courts.

    "The predominant inclination among the AKP is that [the] president's
    permission should be sought," government spokesman Cemil Cicek told
    reporters.

    The bill would also replace the elusive notion of "denigrating
    Turkishness" with "denigrating the Turkish nation". The maximum
    sentence would shrink to two years, potentially freeing those currently
    jailed under this charge. In Turkey, jail sentences not exceeding two
    years can be suspended until the offender commits the same crime again.

    Given its clear parliamentary majority, the AKP should easily pass
    the bill, even if the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP)
    opposes, as it has vowed, any changes to Article 301.

    It was not immediately clear when lawmakers would vote or whether
    EU critics, who have been calling for outright annulment, will be
    satisfied with the revisions.

    The AKP has been criticised in recent months for slowing the pace of
    EU-required reforms.

    "Article 301 ... is one of the priority areas that need to be
    addressed," Tuesday's Turkish Daily News quoted an official from
    the EU Secretariat General as saying. "But it is not the only one,"
    the anonymous source added.

    A to-do list from Brussels reportedly seeks the urgent revision of
    a number of other bills expanding freedom of expression.

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said on Monday that Ankara would outline
    its reform priorities.

    "We are determined on the issue of reforms," he told reporters. "No
    matter how hard they are, we believe reforms are important for
    Turkey's future."
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