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Cartoons Illustrate Lack Of Press Freedom In Turkey

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  • Cartoons Illustrate Lack Of Press Freedom In Turkey

    CARTOONS ILLUSTRATE LACK OF PRESS FREEDOM IN TURKEY

    Radio Netherlands
    http://www.roportaj.nl/
    http://www.rad ionetherlands.nl/currentaffairs/region/netherlands /090127-Turkey-cartoonists
    Jan 26 2009
    Netherlands

    In Turkey, prosecution for insulting the nation is almost an
    occupational hazard for journalists and cartoonists. A number of
    provocative Turkish cartoons are on display at an exhibition in
    the Netherlands. Afterwards the organisers hope an internet auction
    will raise money to cover the legal costs for these controversial
    court cases.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has a poor sense of
    humour. In recent years, he has taken many a cartoonist to court. But
    the deluge of court cases has not stopped the illustrators from mocking
    the lack of press freedom in the country. In one cartoon, Sefer Selvi
    draws the prime minister, dressed in hunting gear, shooting at one
    of the newspapers he has taken to court. His dog tears up another copy.

    "As soon as cartoonists raise taboos like the division between church
    and state, the army, the Armenian genocide and Ataturk, the founder
    of the republic of Turkey - the government intervenes,"

    says freelance journalist Mehmet Ulger, chairman of Roportaj, a
    Dutch organisation promoting press freedom in Turkey. He organised
    the exhibition The Power of the Imagination, which opens in the
    Press Museum in Amsterdam on 29 January. The murder of publicist and
    journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 was reason to breathe new life into
    the organisation, set up in 1996 as a bridge between journalists in
    the Netherlands and Turkey.

    "If you want to write news, then you have to keep inside the line"

    Keeping inside the line On his computer, there's a cartoon by Sefer
    Selvi in which Prime Minister Erdogan paints a circle around a
    dumbfounded journalist, saying: "If you want to write news, then you
    have to keep inside the line". Mr Ulger: "Since 2004 Turkey has had
    media legislation guaranteeing freedom of the press, as part of the
    deal for Turkey's accession to the European Union. But press freedom
    has only improved on paper. Turkey is one of the few countries to
    protect sources by law. But this doesn't happen in practice. Even
    the prime minister takes journalists to court."

    Dutch censorship There have been cases in the Netherlands in which
    press freedom has come under pressure. In April last year, Dutch Prime
    Minister Jan Peter Balkenende demanded rectification when an imaginary
    speech by him on Islam was printed in weekly magazine Opinio. In May
    2008, a Dutch cartoonist with the pseudonym Gregorius Nekschot spent
    the night in a cell for allegedly discriminating against Muslims in
    his cartoons. Mr Ulger was surprised by the events.

    "I don't agree with the tenor of the cartoons, but Nekschot has the
    right to draw what he likes."

    Recalcitrant

    More from NRC Handelsblad International Last year, charges were brought
    against Turkish journalists and cartoonists 190 times. As a result the
    media are cautious about what they publish, otherwise they risk losing
    government advertising, the right to accreditation or a press card
    and being investigated. Only a few media become recalcitrant. Mr Ulger:

    "There is a lot of self-censorship, but now and then risks are
    taken. If there is a lot of publicity around a case, the authorities
    do not intervene straight away. Sometimes a year goes by before action
    is taken."

    The Power of the imagination exhibition can be seen from 30 January
    until 8 March in the Press Museum in Amsterdam. During the opening
    on Thursday 29 January, Dutch cartoonist Jos Collignon debates with
    his Turkish colleague Guneri Icoglu, who was once sentenced to eight
    months in prison for his cartoons.
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