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U.S. Accuses Turkey Over Media Freedom

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  • U.S. Accuses Turkey Over Media Freedom

    U.S. ACCUSES TURKEY OVER MEDIA FREEDOM

    Reuters
    Feb 26 2009
    UK

    * Journalists fear reprisals if criticise govt
    * Media group in row over govt graft allegations
    * Media freedoms rise as part of EU membership drive

    ANKARA, Feb 26 (Reuters) - The United States accused Turkey of
    limiting freedom of expression in its annual human rights report and
    said journalists feared reprisals if they criticised Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan's government.

    The report, published on Thursday in Washington, comes amid an
    escalating row between Turkey's largest media company Dogan Yayin
    (DYHOL.IS) and the government.

    Last week, Dogan Yayin was fined nearly $500 million in penalties
    and back-taxes following an investigation by tax authorities, which
    Turkey's leading press association said was aimed at silencing
    critical reporting.

    Erdogan has sharply criticised Dogan, which owns top selling dailies
    Hurriyet, a news agency and broadcasters, and has called on supporters
    not to buy the group's newspapers after they ran stories alleging
    government corruption.

    "Several large holding companies which owned news agencies in the
    country were concerned over losing business opportunities if their
    journalists wrote articles critical of the government," the State
    Department report said without naming any group.

    "Senior government officials, including Prime Minister Erdogan, made
    statements during the year strongly criticizing the press and media
    business figures, particularly following the publishing of reports
    on alleged corruption in entities in Germany connected to the ruling
    party," it said.

    Dogan Yayin, which controls almost half of Turkey's print and
    broadcasting media, reported on a trial in Germany last year involving
    an Islamic charity accused of embezzling donations and sending funds
    to a Turkish pro-government media outlet.

    Erdogan has denied the graft allegations and the Finance Ministry
    has said the Dogan fine was the result of a routine tax inspection
    and was not politically motivated.

    As part of negotiations to join the European Union, Ankara has expanded
    free speech and eased restrictions on the media, including amending
    a penal code article which punished Turks for "insulting Turkishness".

    The article was changed, replacing "Turkishness" with "the Turkish
    nation", but the State Department report noted that restrictions
    still existed despite the amendment, particularly over the sensitive
    subjects of mass killings of Armenians during World War One and
    minority ethnic Kurds.

    The report also found evidence of curbs on the Internet.

    Hundreds of internet websites, including the popular YouTube, have
    been blocked in Turkey. The majority of sites in Turkey closed by
    court order are due to allegations sites encourage suicide, child
    pornography, help users access drugs, promote prostitution or insult
    the founder of modern Turkey. (Editing by Jon Boyle)
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