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Turkey Ready For Free Speech Reform: Minister

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  • Turkey Ready For Free Speech Reform: Minister

    TURKEY READY FOR FREE SPEECH REFORM: MINISTER

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 7, 2008 Monday 9:26 AM GMT

    A bill amending a much-criticised article in the Turkish penal code
    restricting freedom of speech will likely be submitted to parliament
    this week, Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said Monday.

    "The work (on the draft) has been finalised. I believe the proposal
    could be submitted to parliament this week," Sahin told reporters.

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

    Sahin declined to say what the changes would consist of before they
    are first discussed at a cabinet meeting later Monday.

    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.

    Many activists have called for the abolition of Article 301, but
    the government has insisted it should stay in the books, signalling
    instead an intention to narrow its scope.

    Sahin said the government was determined to speed up other reforms
    aimed at boosting Turkey's EU membership prospects following EU
    criticism that Ankara slackened its reform drive in 2007.

    "2008 will be a year in which very serious steps will be taken in
    this field," he said, without elaborating.

    Ankara had little time in 2007 to deal with EU reforms as a
    presidential election in April sparked a severe political crisis and
    prompted early general elections in July.

    Turkey began accession negotiations in October 2005 in six of 35
    policy chapters candidate countries must complete, but the EU froze
    talks in eight chapters in response to Ankara's refusal to grant
    trade privileges to Cyprus, which Ankara does not recognise, under
    a customs union pact with the bloc.

    The accession talks have also been hampered by staunch French
    opposition to Turkey's membership.
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