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ANKARA: Prosecutors to seek permission from president for 301 cases

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  • ANKARA: Prosecutors to seek permission from president for 301 cases

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 14 2008


    Prosecutors to seek permission from president for 301 cases


    The infamous Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which has
    even caused troubles within the government, recently underwent
    another retouch of its proposed amendment text that would require
    prosecutors to seek presidential permission to take any action under
    this article.

    The government says that the change to the amendment text will bring
    more protection for the principle of impartiality.
    In the draft revision text, set to be discussed at Parliament after
    the process to implement recent constitutional amendments to lift a
    headscarf ban at Turkish university campuses is completed, the phrase
    `Turkishness' is replaced with `Turkish nation.'

    Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Çiçek had argued that empowering justice
    ministers to give permission for trials under this article would make
    them targets of criticism and that therefore a commission should be
    charged with the task instead. The ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) had postponed parliamentary deliberation on the
    article to allow time to ponder Çiçek's reservations. However,
    Çiçek's proposal for a commission went unheeded.

    The new text has been submitted to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan, who will examine it at the meeting of his party's Central
    Executive Board (MYK) and make a final assessment. It will then be
    introduced to Parliament.

    The text adopted by the Justice Ministry was initially proposed by
    Sami Selçuk, former chairman of the Supreme Court of Appeals, and
    reads as follows:

    `Public denigration of the Turkish nation, the State of the Republic
    of Turkey, the legislative, executive and judicial organs, military,
    security and forces concerned with security in a manner to undermine
    public credibility and respectability (and outside the objective
    criticism criteria) shall be punishable by imprisonment of six months
    to two years. Expressions of thought intended to criticize shall not
    constitute a crime. The prosecution of above-mentioned crimes shall
    be subject to permission of the president, who will decide in
    consideration of the public good.'

    Many of Turkey's artists and writers, including slain
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, novelist Elif Þafak and Nobel
    Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk, have been tried under 301 for
    allegedly insulting Turkishness. Since it went into effect on June 1,
    2005 as part of a package needed to start full membership talks with
    the EU, charges have been brought against writers, intellectuals and
    journalists in more than 60 cases.



    14.02.2008

    ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA
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