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EU: Commission Plans To Push Turkey On Issue Of Free Speech

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  • EU: Commission Plans To Push Turkey On Issue Of Free Speech

    EU: COMMISSION PLANS TO PUSH TURKEY ON ISSUE OF FREE SPEECH
    by David Cronin

    IPS - Inter Press Service
    September 18, 2008 Thursday

    The slow pace of Turkey's freedom of expression reforms is holding
    up its effort to join the European Union, according to an official
    assessment set to be published in November.

    The European Commission's upcoming annual report on Turkey will outline
    its views on reforms undertaken by the Ankara authorities with a view
    to fulfilling the country's decades-old ambition of EU membership.

    For most of this year, the Turkish political establishment has been
    fixated on a legal challenge against the ruling Justice and Development
    party over allegations that the Islamist background of its leadership
    threatened the country's constitutionally enshrined secularism.

    Although the case was dismissed by Turkey's highest court in July,
    Jean-Christophe Filori, head of the European Commission's Turkey
    department, said it had "taken up energies on all sides" and
    "distracted attention from the need to pursue reforms."

    Addressing a Brussels debate on Turkey, Filori was nonetheless sanguine
    about some steps that have been taken. It is positive, he contended,
    that Article 301 of the country's penal code -- under which writers
    and academics have been prosecuted over claims that they insulted
    Turkishness -- has been amended. And he argued that there appears to
    have been a "sustained decrease" in incidences of torture of detainees,
    even if the number of complaints of ill-treatment has risen.

    Human Rights Watch is less impressed, however. "In general, there
    has been a stagnation in the implementation of human rights reforms
    in the past few years," said the group's researcher on Turkey, Emma
    Sinclair-Webb. "This year has been another one of stagnation."

    She was particularly critical of efforts to alter Article 301. Whereas
    reforms approved by the Turkish assembly earlier this year amounted
    to a "tweaking in the wording" of this article, she insisted that it
    would be preferable to delete the clause entirely.

    Article 301 has been invoked against intellectuals who have exhorted
    the present-day Turkish authorities to acknowledge that the slaughter
    of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915 was tantamount to
    genocide. Among those who have faced charges as a result of it were
    the Nobel winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and Hrant Dink, editor of a
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper who was murdered by extremists
    last year.

    Under reforms, the offense of insulting Turkishness has been replaced
    with the offense of insulting the Turkish nation. The approval of
    the minister of justice is also now required for prosecutions to
    proceed. Earlier this month, the current minister Mehmet Ali Sahin
    decide to allow a case be taken against the writer Temel Demirer over
    a speech he delivered the day after Dink's murder.

    Demirer's lawyer Siar Isvanoglu said the prosecution illustrated how
    promises by the authorities "regarding the European Union, democracy,
    structural reform and human rights are all fairy tales."

    During a visit to Ankara this week, the head of the Liberal grouping in
    the European Parliament Graham Watson said: "The revision to Article
    301 earlier this year was a positive step but its text continues to
    prescribe prison sentences to those who insult the state and its
    organs of government. That is troubling to other European nations
    and is incompatible with liberal democracy. Mature democratic states
    should have the self-confidence to absorb criticism from within. The
    Turkish state is legitimate -- it should be able to withstand peaceful
    expressions of opinion from its own citizens."

    But the country's foreign minister Ali Babacan cited the changes to
    Article 301 as an example of the reforms that Turkey is taking in
    order to bring its legislation into line with that applying in the
    EU. After talks in Brussels Sept. 17, Babacan promised that further
    steps will be taken to meet the requirements of EU membership.

    The European Commission is also likely to express concern
    about the persecution of homosexuals in its forthcoming report
    on Turkey. According to Filori, the banning of the gay rights
    association Lamba Istanbul by a local court in May "does give us
    cause for concern."

    Lamba spokeswoman Sedef Cakmak said her organization is appealing
    against the ban and if necessary will take the case to the European
    Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

    While homosexuality is not illegal in Turkey, the country offers no
    legal protection to gays, lesbians and transgender people. "This means
    you can be fired from a job just because you are lesbian or taken
    into custody without any reason just because you are transgender,"
    Cakmak said.

    Cakmak said her organization had documented many incidents of
    homosexuals being arrested arbitrarily or beaten by the police. While
    a greater social tolerance toward gays and lesbians has emerged,
    there have also been several killings of homosexuals in recent years.

    "If you can hide your identity, you will have no problem," Cakmak
    added. "If you cannot or if you refuse to hide your identity, that is
    where the problems start. If you are not a very feminine gay or not a
    very masculine lesbian, you can have an easy life. As you can imagine,
    that is not the case with transgender people. They can't hide their
    identity, and that's why they are suffering most."
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