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Nobel Winner Pamuk Back In Court For Contempt

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  • Nobel Winner Pamuk Back In Court For Contempt

    NOBEL-WINNER PAMUK BACK IN COURT FOR CONTEMPT
    by Furio Morroni

    ANSAmed
    http://www.ansamed.info/en/top/ME 12.WAM50268.html
    May 15 2009
    Italy

    (ANSAmed) - ANKARA - The notorious article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    Code regarding freedom of expression was amended a year ago, but it
    doesn't seem to have done much good. Nobel Prize-winning Turkish writer
    Orhan Pamuk is back under the hammer for "contempt of the Turkish
    national identity" over his statement about the massacres of Armenians
    during the age of the Ottoman Empire. The news was reported today by
    newspaper Hurriyet, which told of the sentence handed down yesterday
    by Turkey's Supreme Court which, for the second time in a year,
    has thrown out the judgement of an Istanbul court which had rejected
    the accusations levelled at Pamuk and closed the trial. According to
    Supreme Court the charges brought against Pamuk for having offended
    the Turkish nation were valid and the initial court made a mistake
    in their initial dismissal of the suit, which they threw out because
    the plaintiffs could not speak for the entire country. The initial
    offence regards Pamuk telling a Swiss magazine that "we Turkish have
    killed 30,000 Kurds and a million Armenians and nobody, apart from
    me, dares to speak about it in Turkey". This statement, which Many
    Turkish people claim is "Pamuk's self-candidacy for the Nobel Prize
    and the real reason why he won it", unleashed great controversy
    in Turkey and offended the sensibilities of many. For example, the
    relatives of the more than 30,000 killed by the Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK - considered a terrorist organisation by the USA and EU)
    in the armed struggle against the Turkish State, who were not only
    Kurdish, but soldiers and Turkish citizens. Six Turkish citizens,
    relatives of soldiers killed by PKK rebels, have pressed charges
    against Pamuk for moral damages, requesting compensation of around
    30,000 dollars. However, in June 2006 a civil tribunal in Istanbul
    judged that "the plaintiffs cannot be considered the representatives
    of an entire nation" and as such |'cannot say that they are personally
    offended" by the writer's statements. The Supreme Court overturned this
    sentence for the first time on January 22 2008, claiming that |'the
    feeling of belonging to a nation is a right that must be protected
    and a statement which harms the entire nation gives the individual
    the right to launch legal action against this". Yesterday's sentence
    saw the Supreme Court re-state its position and send the trial back
    to court which will have to look in detail at the issue. If found
    guilty, Pamuk will have to pay damages to the plaintiffs, which have
    gone up in the meantime and could in theory run to millions in that
    the Supreme Court's ruling gives each Turkish citizen the right to
    sue for any defamatory remark about Turkey. (ANSAmed).
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