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The United States Accused Turkey Of Limiting Freedom Of Expression

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  • The United States Accused Turkey Of Limiting Freedom Of Expression

    THE UNITED STATES ACCUSED TURKEY OF LIMITING FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    28.02.2009 00:18 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ US Department of State has criticized Turkish
    government in its annual human rights report. According to the report
    "Individuals could not criticize the state or government publicly
    without fear of reprisal, and the government continued to restrict
    expression by individuals sympathetic to some religious, political,
    and Kurdish nationalist or cultural viewpoints. Active debates on
    human rights and government policies continued, particularly on
    issues relating to the country's EU membership process, the role
    of the military, Islam, political Islam, the question of Turks of
    Kurdish and other ethnic or religious origins as "minorities," and the
    history of the Turkish-Armenian conflict at the end of the Ottoman
    Empire. However, persons who wrote or spoke out on such topics,
    particularly on the Armenian issue, risked prosecution. The TPA
    reported that serious restrictions on freedom of expression continued
    despite legal reforms related to the country's EU candidacy.

    According to the Turkish government, there were no journalists held on
    speech violations during the year. However, the TPA reported there were
    21 journalists in jail for the content of their reporting, including
    Kurdish media members and those accused of being leftist dissidents."

    It is mentioned in the report "in October 2008 the Ministry of Justice
    approved continuance of the case against publisher and writer Temel
    Demirer under Article 301. Demirer had been charged for a statement he
    made after Dink's killing, calling for the recognition of the tragic
    events of 1915 as "genocide."

    The case against Atilla Tuygan for translating two books dealing with
    Turkish-Armenian relations continued at year's end. The case was
    opened in May 2007 after the books' publisher, Ragip Zarakolu, was
    acquitted, and the court ruled that Tuygan should be tried instead. In
    a second case, Raqip Zarakolu was convicted on June 19 and sentenced
    to five months in prison for publishing The Truth Will Set Us Free,
    a book describing the experience of the author's grandmother during
    the tragic events of 1915. The court postponed the imposition of
    punishment, and Zarakolu and his lawyer appealed the verdict," the
    official website of US Department of State reports.
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