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ANKARA: Bickering overt Article 301 in parliamentary panel

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  • ANKARA: Bickering overt Article 301 in parliamentary panel

    Turkish Daily News
    April 19 2008

    Bickering overt Article 301 in parliamentary panel
    Saturday, April 19, 2008

    ANKARA - TDN Parliament Bureau

    The Justice Commission in Parliament was the scene of heated
    discussions Friday between the government and the opposition over
    proposed amendments to articles 301 and 305 of the penal code, which
    the European Union says restrict free speech.

    Deputies from the Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Nationalist
    Movement Party (MHP) were up in arms when a police officer attempted
    to take the media out of the parliamentary panel. The CHP and the
    MHP argue the contentious articles should remain in place.

    Opposition deputies asked the police officer to leave and continued
    discussing the amendments amid bickering. The ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) is planning to pass the amendments during
    the General Assembly next week.

    The members of the Justice Commission convened in the meeting room of
    the Planning and Budgetary Commission Friday. Before discussing the
    proposed amendments, bickering over the media broke out. Commission
    Chairman Ahmet Ä°yimaya told cameramen and photo correspondents to
    leave the room, while announcing that members of print media may stay,
    which drew adverse reactions from MHP deputies.

    MHP parliamentary group deputy leader Oktay Vural and commission
    member Faruk Bal yelled, "You are blocking the media. You cannot make
    a decision on your own. Where is freedom of communication?" Bal said,
    "We'll hold negotiations to free insulting the nation. You are doing
    this under the excuse of freedom of expression. The nation must be
    aware of this excuse. You cannot prevent the press."

    The CHP's Halil Unlutepe supported Bal and sarcastically asked
    whether the ruling party wanted them to leave the room as well. Some
    MHP deputies interestingly suggested cameras be given to deputies in
    order to record what happened during the discussions.

    Police taken out of room

    While Ä°yimaya was asking the cameramen to leave the commission,
    a police officer from the Parliament's guard unit intervened in the
    incident. MHP and CHP deputies asked who he was and told him to go out
    of the room. Unlutepe fought with the police officer, who was taken
    outside the room. Vural shouted, "There is no need for despotism. Is
    there dictatorship here? There is the freedom of communication."

    Vural and his colleagues demanded that the identity of the police
    officer must be revealed. Some MHP members asked whether he was the
    minister's guard. "Let the (justice) minister explain who committed
    outrage against the deputies and the press."

    Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin said his guard did not interfere
    in such incidents and then called his guard to prove that it had
    not been he who interfered in the bickering in the commission. The
    debate was concluded after it was agreed that three cameramen and
    one photo correspondent would be allowed to follow the negotiations
    in the commission, whose images and photos would be distributed to
    other services.

    Debate rages on

    The AKP's Bozdag also became a matter of discussion. The CHP's Ali
    Rıza Ozturk blamed the AKP lawmaker for trying to influence the
    deputies with his gestures during the session. Bozdag accused the
    CHP and MHP deputies of shouting at him.

    Ozturk answered, "You attempted to beat up a man," referring to some
    AKP lawmakers' move to beat up independent deputy Kamer Genc. "Is it
    fair if every party with majority in Parliament applies violence and
    wreaks havoc?" Bozdag had to leave the commission upon reactions.

    'Murderer article'

    Pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) Å~^ırnak deputy Hasip
    Kaplan opposed Article 301 of the penal code. "This is an article that
    led to the murder of (Turkish-Armenian journalist) Hrant Dink. The
    origin of such an article dates back to fascist Slovenian law,"
    he said.

    The MHP's Oktay Vural interfered and said, "The Turkish nation is
    united, not a mosaic." Kaplan disagreed and said, "You cannot tell
    me I am not a Kurd. I am proud of being a Kurd. You cannot tell me
    to oppose my identity."

    Bal said Article 301 was an obstacle for those who want Turkey to
    negotiate with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). He argued
    that proposing an amendment to Article 301 was not moral.

    --Boundary_(ID_gF1DpTr/rmgzNXiHGEudSA)--
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