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Civil Disobedience Restarts: 200 People Commit The `Thought Crime'

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  • Civil Disobedience Restarts: 200 People Commit The `Thought Crime'

    BIA, Turkey
    May 8 2008



    Civil Disobedience Restarts: 200 People Commit The `Thought Crime'.


    The Initiative Against Thought Crime restarts its activities as a
    reaction to the increased number of law suits targeting people who
    simply express their opinions. 200 people report themselves to the
    authorities for the same `crime'.

    Bia news servıce

    08-05-2008


    The new lawsuits and the nearly completed trials forced the
    13-year-old Initiative Against Thought Crime to restart its `civil
    disobedience' activities to draw attention to the arrangements against
    the freedom of expression. They announced their decision yesterday
    (May 5) at a press release given at Ã`sküdar Hall of Justice
    in Ä°stanbul.


    Following the press release, more than two hundred people denounced
    themselves by stating that they agree with the `criminal' thoughts of
    the individuals like the lawyer Eren Keskin, the former Democratic
    Society Party (DEP) deputy Mahmut Alınak, the former editor of
    Agos, an Armenian-Turkish weekly, Aris Nalcı, the license
    holder of the same newspaper Sarkis Seropyan, and the singers
    Bülent Ersoy and Ferhat Tunç.

    Yurdatapan: Peaceful expression of a thought cannot be sued
    The individuals who took part in the civil disobedience act signed a
    proclamation that said they knew the meaning and outcome of what they
    were doing and signed it with their free will. The initiative
    spokesperson Å?anar Yurdatapan reported their crimes to
    Ã`sküdar public prosecutor's office on behalf of the
    activists.


    Yurdatapan explained that the civil disobedience activities of1995 are
    restarted, that they will continue reporting themselves to the
    prosecutors by becoming a party to the crimes of the people who are
    sued for expressing their opinions in a peaceful manner, whatever
    their opinions may be.

    Keskin: I hope this activity will help our voice be heard
    According to Keskin, `When the topic is the freedom of expression, we
    should look at which thoughts are banned. These are thoughts related
    to the Kurdish, Armenian, Cyprus and the Turban (Headscarf) problems.


    Everyone who thinks differently from status quo commits a thought
    crime. I am also one of these people. I hope this activity will help
    our voice be heard.' The journalist Erol Ã-zkoray, the artist
    Ferhat Tunç, the actor Mehmet Atak and some civil disobedience
    activists joined Keskin as well.
    Keskin, Allınak, Nalcı, Seropyan, Tunç are
    accused, Ersoy is under investigation

    Following the demand by the general staff, the lawyer Keskin was sued
    for her interview with the German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel on June
    24, 2006, which was construed as `denigrating the Turkish Armed
    Forces.'


    The former DEP deputy Alınak was sued for being in violation of
    the 1928 Law of the Acceptance and Application of Turkish Letters,
    according to Article 222 of the Turkish Penal Code.


    The legal proceedings about Nalcı and Seropyan for `obstructing
    the just trial proceedings' is continuing. They are on trial for their
    article titled `Akıllı Tahta' (The Smart Board) that was
    published on the November 9, 2007 issue of Agos, in which they
    critiqued the decision that was reached regarding Hrant Dink's Article
    301 case.

    The singer Bülent Ersoy's words during a television program are
    under investigation for `alienating people from doing their military
    service.' The singer Ferhat Tunç is accused for `doing the
    propaganda of a terrorist organization'.

    Civil disobedience again¦

    Since the beginning of the `civil disobedience' activity at the time
    when YaÅ?ar Kemal, a famous writer from Turkey, was called to
    the State Security Court in 1995 for his article published in Der
    Speigel, more than eighty thousand people have taken part in the
    `crimes' of the others by giving signatures to seven books and
    forty-eight booklets. (EÃ-/TB)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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