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  • ANKARA: Freedom House highlights challenges for Turkish democracy

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 3 2008


    Freedom House highlights challenges for Turkish democracy


    Turkey has made significant progress in democratization in the past
    decade, but major challenges remain in terms of local and national
    governance, the electoral process, minority rights, the strength of
    civil society and press freedoms, a US-based international think tank
    announced yesterday in Ä°stanbul.


    The content of a report titled `Turkey in Transit,' prepared by the
    European chapter of Freedom House, an organization famous for its
    ranking of countries' levels of freedom, was shared with journalists
    at a press conference on Friday morning.

    Turkey has seen a `positive trend of reform' in the past few years,
    the report's author, Nigar Göksel, said, noting that the trend
    had been stalled in the years 2006 and 2007. According to the report,
    increasing polarization in Turkey caused by growing tension between
    the governing Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and segments
    that see the party as an Islamist threat is an obstacle on Turkey's
    path of reform. Other problems that remain as challenges to democracy
    in Turkey include the executive branch of the state being too strong
    vis-à-vis the legislature and judiciary, too much
    centralization in public administration, problems implementing new
    reforms passed in the past few years, cronyism in many institutions,
    low female representation in politics, a higher rate of taxes on civil
    society organizations compared to other countries and persistent
    corruption, particularly in public tenders.

    Göksel also noted that intolerance toward non-Muslim religious
    minorities was creating concern, despite a law adopted earlier this
    year that returns property seized from non-Muslim foundations by the
    state. The brutal killing of three Christians in the eastern province
    of Malatya last year and the shooting of a Catholic priest in 2006
    made their way into the report as examples of intolerance and violence
    against non-Muslims. Turkey's overloaded and sluggish judiciary was
    also cited as one of the significant obstacles to a better and sounder
    democracy.

    The report said the corporate structure of Turkish media, where large
    conglomerates with interests in other sectors own media outlets,
    raises concerns that newspapers might be `prone to try and remain on
    good terms with politicians.' The division of the media primarily
    along pro and anti-government lines also poses a problem for press
    freedoms, the report warned.

    Yesterday's press conference followed a report released this week by
    Freedom House -- ahead of May 3, World Press Freedom Day -- that ranks
    countries on the basis of media freedom. In this year's report, Turkey
    is the only country ranked as `Partly Free' in Western Europe. Out of
    195 countries and territories covered in the report, 72 (37 percent)
    were rated `Free,' 59 (30 percent) `Partly Free' and 64 (33 percent)
    `Not Free.' The evaluations are based on an assessment of the legal,
    political and economic environments in which journalists worked during
    2007.

    Turkey's press freedom rating declined to 51 in this year's report,
    two points down from the previous year, said Balint Molnar of Freedom
    House Europe. He said the continued prosecution of large numbers of
    journalists under an anti-free speech penal code article and the 2007
    murder of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink had played a clear role
    in the decline. Monlar added that press freedoms were declining on a
    global scale.


    03.05.2008


    E. BARIÅ? ALTINTAÅ? Ä°STANBUL
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