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ANKARA: Activists, OSCE slam publisher Zarakolu's conviction

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  • ANKARA: Activists, OSCE slam publisher Zarakolu's conviction

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    June 21 2008



    Activists, OSCE slam publisher Zarakolu's conviction


    Activists condemned the conviction of a Turkish publisher on Thursday
    under a controversial law that Ankara amended just two months ago in a
    bid to satisfy European Union demands for greater freedom of
    expression.


    Writers' organization International PEN said the conviction of
    Ragıp Zarakolu for insulting Turkey showed that Ankara's reform
    of Turkish Penal Code (TCK) Article 301 was meaningless. The reform
    removed a reference to `insulting Turkishness,' for which dozens of
    writers, including Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, had been put on trial
    -- but it is still a crime to insult the Turkish nation and
    state. Justice Ministry approval is also needed now to open a case
    under the article.

    `This is a very clear example that the so-called amendment of 301 is
    good for nothing. It was just a bad joke,' International PEN chief
    Eugene Schoulgin told Reuters, adding that there were more than 80
    such cases pending against writers and journalists. Turkish writers
    had warned before the April amendment that they would continue to be
    targeted by nationalist prosecutors.

    `This court decision seems to bear out our worst fears that the
    changes to the law won't necessarily make a difference,' said Human
    Rights Watch's Turkey researcher Emma Sinclair-Webb.

    The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) defended the
    changes to Article 301, saying that other members of the EU, which
    Ankara wants to join, have similar rules. Brussels welcomed the reform
    as a step forward but called for further moves.

    Publisher Zarakolu was sentenced to five months in jail, convertible
    into a fine, but will appeal, Schoulgin said. Zarakolu was not
    available for comment. Zarakolu was tried for publishing a translation
    of a book about the Armenian massacres, which Ankara denies amounted
    to `genocide.' George Jerjian's `The Truth Will Set Us Free' is a call
    for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and tells the story of
    how a Turk saved the writer's Armenian grandmother.

    Meanwhile, Miklos Haraszti, the OSCE representative on media freedom,
    on Thursday condemned the five-month prison sentence handed down to
    Zarakolu. `It is disappointing that despite recent changes in the law,
    serious obstacles to free speech in Turkey remain. People are still
    jailed for publishing peaceful ideas,' said Haraszti. `Freedom of
    debate in Turkey will increase only if the government stops trying to
    control the debate in the first place. Article 301 must be abolished
    altogether.'

    The sentence is commutable to a monetary fine, but Zarakolu has said
    he opposes paying the fine on principle and will appeal the verdict.

    `Regardless of the legal dispute over this particular case, publishing
    a book critical about a country's history should not be criminalized
    in a democracy. The Helsinki principles, to which OSCE participating
    states including Turkey have committed, provide for the free flow of
    information and ideas,' said Haraszti.

    In May 2008, Zarakolu was the recipient of the International
    Publishers Association's Freedom to Publish Prize.

    On the other hand, Council of Europe Secretary-General Terry Davis
    said new anxieties had been created over Turkey in terms of `freedom
    of expression.' A statement he issued says the amendments to Article
    301 raised hopes but that recent cases filed under the article against
    a publisher, a singer and a children's chorus had cast a shadow over
    these hopes. `As a friend of Turkey, I want to remind the Turkish
    officials that they need to respect freedom of expression to establish
    a real democracy. Also, this right is protected by Article 10 of the
    European Convention on Human Rights, which Turkey ratified in 1950
    when it joined the Council of Europe,' Davis said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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