Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Academic sentenced over Ataturk

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Academic sentenced over Ataturk

    BBC News
    Jan 28 2008


    Academic sentenced over Ataturk

    By Sarah Rainsford
    BBC News, Istanbul

    A Turkish court has handed down a 15-month suspended jail term to an
    academic found guilty of insulting the state's founder, Mustafa Kemal
    Ataturk.

    Professor Atilla Yayla said the trial highlighted the limits on free
    speech and academic debate in Turkey.

    His crime was to suggest in academic discussion that the early
    Turkish republic was not as progressive as portrayed in official
    books.

    His lawyers say they will lodge an immediate appeal.

    Professor Yayla told the BBC he was prepared to take his case to the
    European Court of Human Rights if necessary.


    "I want to emphasise again and again that Turkey's most pressing
    problem is freedom of expression," he said.


    Turkey should evolve into being a country where people are not
    punished because of their thoughts

    Prof Atilla Yayla

    The prosecutor had asked the judge to impose a five-year prison
    sentence.

    This trial has become a test of academic freedom in Turkey, which is
    pursuing a long-term ambition to become an EU member.

    Mr Yayla had also warned that, as Turkey moved closer to Europe,
    Europeans would inevitably question why Turks displayed so many
    pictures and statues of Ataturk.

    The professor was vilified by parts of the Turkish press, suspended
    from work at an Ankara university, and brought to trial.

    Mr Yayla, a well-known liberal, denied the charge of insulting
    Ataturk and argued that academics must be guaranteed freedom of
    expression to pursue their research.

    'Insulting Turkishness'

    The Turkish parliament is preparing to debate amending another law
    that restricts free speech.

    Article 301 on "insulting Turkishness" has been used to prosecute
    dozens of writers and intellectuals, including Nobel prize winner
    Orhan Pamuk.

    "Many foreign observers concentrate on Article 301, but there are
    other laws and articles in different laws, which have the potential
    to restrict freedom of expression, as it is in my case," Mr Yayla
    told the BBC.

    "What is important is that Turkey should evolve into being a country
    where people are not punished because of their thoughts. And to
    achieve this we ought to make reforms in the whole legal system and
    also change the mentality in the judiciary. Otherwise Turkey will go
    on suffering."

    The EU has been pressing for a change to Article 301 for well over a
    year, but the government has faced stiff opposition from
    nationalists, both within the ruling party and in the opposition.

    But changes to the law which protects Ataturk are not up for
    discussion.
Working...
X