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ANKARA: RSF: Article 301 Is "Enemy Of Press Freedom"

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  • ANKARA: RSF: Article 301 Is "Enemy Of Press Freedom"

    RSF: ARTICLE 301 IS "ENEMY OF PRESS FREEDOM"

    BIA
    Feb 14 2008
    Turkey

    In its annual report for 2008, Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
    criticised Article 301 and the nationalist obstruction of press
    freedom. The murder of Hrant Dink could have been prevented.

    2007 began very badly, with the murder of Turkish-Armenian Agos
    newspaper editor Hrant Dink. It was a tough year for press freedom,
    with authoritarian behaviour and nationalist violence.

    Dink's murder could have been prevented Hrank Dink was shot dead on 19
    January 2007 in front of the Istanbul offices of the privately-owned
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly magazine Agos he edited. The
    killer, O. S., from Trabzon, a bastion of Turkish nationalism, was
    arrested hours later and investigations soon showed he had ties to
    the security forces, which had been warned several times Dink was
    going to be killed.

    But officials refused to prosecute the police suspects and evidence
    was reportedly destroyed. The trial of the 19 suspects began in
    Istanbul in July amid tight police security and because O.S. (17)
    was a minor, was held in secret. The second hearing mentioned the
    police involvement. The third hearing was on 11 February 2008, and
    the next hearing is on 25 February.

    Article 301, the enemy of press freedom When the hitman was arrested
    he expressed no remorse and said Dink deserved to die for insulting
    Turks. Dink had been prosecuted several times for calling the
    Ottoman Empire massacre of Armenians "genocide," a term that Turkey
    rejects. Article 301 of the criminal code provides for between six
    months and three years in prison for anyone "openly denigrating"
    the government, courts, police or armed forces.

    Dink was given a suspended six-month prison sentence in 2005 under
    this article and was prosecuted again in September 2006 for calling
    the Armenian massacre "genocide" in an interview with Reuters news
    agency. His son Arat and two other Agos staffers were given year-long
    suspended prison sentences in October 2007 for reprinting the interview
    in the magazine.

    Promises of amendment not kept A few days earlier, newly-elected
    Turkish President Abdullah Gul told the Council of Europe's
    Parliamentary Assembly that he favoured amending article 301. The EU's
    annual progress report on Turkey's application to join the EU said very
    serious efforts were still needed to improve freedom of expression.

    Justice minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said on 6 November the government
    would amend article 301 and that the cabinet would give priority to
    proposals based on calls from civil society groups. Prime minister
    Erdogan made similar promises a year earlier.

    The army as a threat to the media Nationalism was behind many attacks
    on press freedom. Yasin Yetisgen, owner-editor of the Kurdish
    paper Coban Atesi, was thrown in jail for printing an article on
    2 August saying the town of Antep was in "northern Kurdistan," an
    officially-illegal term. Journalists were several times forbidden to
    report on Turkish military operations in Iraqi Kurdistan against PKK
    rebel bases, officially so as not to demoralise the population with
    "negative" news but in fact to preserve the image of the army.

    This desire for control was shown in March when two reports, from the
    the military high command and the prime minister's office, were leaked
    to the media. They revealed that media outlets and journalists were
    classified as to how far they agreed with government policies and that
    official accreditation was used to either exert pressure on a media
    outlet or journalist or to reward those that backed the armed forces.

    Three French journalists - Guillaume Perrier of Le Monde and two
    photographers for the Capa photo agency - were arrested on 24 October
    at the Habur border-crossing between Turkey and Iraq for refusing to
    show their film to customs officials, who roughed one of them up.

    They were held for questioning with no reason given, separated and
    interrogated. They were freed by the town prosecutor the next day
    but their film and equipent was not returned.

    Kurdish media faced obstacles Many Kurdish media outlets were
    shut down, sometimes more than once, mainly for supposed "terrorist
    propaganda," and most often the newspapers Gundem and Guncel. Gun TV,
    broadcasting in the southern region of Diyarbakir and the only station
    allowed to put out Kurdish-language programmes, ran into many problems,
    including when it broadcast Kurdish songs.

    Columnist Aydin Erdogan was dismissed in October by the daily
    Cumhuriyet for criticising, during a TV debate on the pro-Kurdish
    Roj TV channel, planned constitutional changes and for advocating a
    peaceful solution to the Kurdish conflict. He was also not allowed to
    present his own books put out by Cumhuriyet Publishing at the Tuyap
    book fair as had been planned.
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