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ANKARA: Freedom Of Press Woes, Self-Censorship In US State Dept Repo

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  • ANKARA: Freedom Of Press Woes, Self-Censorship In US State Dept Repo

    FREEDOM OF PRESS WOES, SELF-CENSORSHIP IN US STATE DEPT REPORT

    Today's Zaman
    March 13 2008
    Turkey

    The US State Department's annual human rights report on Turkey has
    highlighted a case filed against prominent defense analyst and Today's
    Zaman columnist Lale Sarýibrahimoðlu in its section covering freedom
    of speech and the press as part of respect for civil liberties in
    the country.

    "The law provides for freedom of speech and of the press; however,
    the government continued to limit these freedoms in occasional cases.

    The government intimidated journalists into practicing
    self-censorship," the report released on Tuesday maintained.

    "In April an Ýstanbul court began investigating journalists Lale
    Sariibrahimoðlu of Today's Zaman newspaper and Ahmet Þýk of Nokta
    newsmagazine under Article 301, after Þýk published a Nokta story
    in which Sariibrahimoðlu expressed concern about the 'mentality'
    of the military and its role in internal security. The court held
    its first hearing on Nov. 12; the case continued at year's end,"
    the report noted.

    "The government, particularly the police and judiciary, limited
    freedom of expression through the use of constitutional restrictions
    and numerous laws, including articles of the penal code prohibiting
    insults to the government, the state, 'Turkishness,' Ataturk or the
    institutions and symbols of the republic," the report said.

    It referred to the notorious Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code
    (TCK) many times, particularly in relation with freedom of speech
    and the press. The vague article, which foresees imprisonment for
    "insulting Turkishness," has been used in the prosecution of a number
    of writers and intellectuals, including slain Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink and Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning novelist
    Orhan Pamuk.

    --Boundary_(ID_NOBlQY6Y2nAlsSh6hyRAtw)--
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