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ANKARA: Prison for Turkey book 'insult'

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  • ANKARA: Prison for Turkey book 'insult'

    BBC NEWS

    Prison for Turkey book 'insult'

    A Turkish publisher has been sentenced to five months in prison for
    publishing a book by a British author about the mass killing of
    Armenians in 1915. Ragip Zarakolu was found guilty of "insulting the
    institutions of the Turkish republic" under Article 301 of Turkey's
    penal code.

    The controversial law was recently reformed under pressure from the EU
    to ensure freedom of speech in Turkey.

    This is the first high-profile verdict to be handed down since then.

    Mr Zarakolu's sentence seems to confirm campaigners' fears that
    changes to the law were merely cosmetic, says the BBC's Sarah
    Rainsford in Istanbul.

    In April it became a crime to insult the Turkish nation, rather than
    Turkishness. But insulting the Turkish nation can still be punished by
    up to two years in jail.

    Sensitive issue

    Mr Zarakolu was brought to trial for publishing a book by British
    author George Jerjian on the mass killings of Armenians under the
    Ottoman Empire in 1915.

    Turkey denies the killings were genocide and the issue remains highly
    sensitive.

    Passing sentence, the judge told Mr Zarakolu he had insulted the
    Turkish republic and its founders. His own defence - that he had the
    right to criticise - was rejected.

    Mr Zarakolu's case was not referred to the Turkish ministry of
    justice, as required under the reforms, and he has said he will appeal
    against the verdict, our correspondent reports.

    His sentence will not be imposed until that appeal process is
    complete.

    Outside the court, Mr Zarakolu said that such rulings had silenced
    many writers in Turkey but that he would continue to challenge the
    restrictions.

    "I was partly waiting for this result. But it is a struggle for the
    truth and it will go on. I do not accept myself as convicted. This is
    a conviction for official history and for denialism," he said.

    The justice ministry recently revealed that 1,700 people were tried
    under Article 301 in 2006 alone.

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe /7459729.stm
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