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Lawyer Calls Turkish Christians' Trial A 'Scandal'

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  • Lawyer Calls Turkish Christians' Trial A 'Scandal'

    LAWYER CALLS TURKISH CHRISTIANS' TRIAL A 'SCANDAL'
    Barbara G. Baker

    Crosswalk.com
    http://www.crosswalk.com/news /religiontoday/11610031/
    Oct 20 2009

    SILIVRI, Turkey (CDN) -- After three prosecution witnesses testified
    yesterday that they didn't even know two Christians on trial for
    "insulting Turkishness and Islam," a defense lawyer called the trial a
    "scandal."

    Speaking after yesterday's hearing in the drawn-out trial, defense
    attorney Haydar Polat said the case's initial acceptance by a
    state prosecutor in northwestern Turkey was based only on a written
    accusation from the local gendarmerie headquarters unaccompanied by
    any documentation.

    "It's a scandal," Polat said. "It was a plot, a planned one, but a
    very unsuccessful plot, as there is no evidence."

    Turkish Christians Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal were arrested in
    October 2006; after a two-day investigation they were charged with
    allegedly slandering Turkishness and Islam while talking about
    their faith with three young men in Silivri, an hour's drive west
    of Istanbul.

    Even the three prosecution witnesses who appeared to testify at
    Thursday's (Oct. 15) hearing failed to produce any evidence whatsoever
    against Tastan and Topal, who could be jailed for up to two years if
    convicted on three separate charges.

    Yesterday's three witnesses, all employed as office personnel for
    various court departments in Istanbul, testified that they had never
    met or heard of the two Christians on trial. The two court employees
    who had requested New Testaments testified that they had initiated
    the request themselves.

    The first witness, a bailiff in a Petty Offenses Court in Istanbul
    for the past 28 years, declared he did not know the defendants or
    anyone else in the courtroom.

    But he admitted that he had responded to a newspaper ad about 10 years
    ago to request a free New Testament. After telephoning the number to
    give his address, he said, the book arrived in the mail and is still
    in his home.

    He also said he had never heard of the church mentioned in the
    indictment, although he had once gone to a wedding in a church in
    Istanbul's Balikpazari district, where a large Armenian Orthodox
    church is located.

    "This is the extent of what I know about this subject," he concluded.

    Fidgeting nervously, a second witness stated, "I am not at
    all acquainted with the defendants, nor do I know any of these
    participants. I was not a witness to any one of the matters in the
    indictment. I just go back and forth to my work at the Istanbul State
    Prosecutors' office."

    The third person to testify reiterated that he also had no acquaintance
    with the defendants or anyone in the courtroom. But he stated under
    questioning that he had entered a website on the Internet some five
    or six years ago that offered a free New Testament.

    "I don't know or remember the website's name or contents," the witness
    said, "but after checking the box I was asked for some of my identity
    details, birth date, job, cell phone - I don't remember exactly what."

    Noting that many shops and markets asked for the same kind of
    information, the witness said, "I don't see any harm in that,"
    adding that he would not be an open person if he tried to hide all
    his personal details.

    For the next hearing set for Jan. 28, 2010, the court has repeated
    its summons to three more prosecution witnesses who failed to appear
    yesterday: a woman employed in Istanbul's security police headquarters
    and two armed forces personnel whose whereabouts had not yet been
    confirmed by the population bureau.

    Case 'Demands Acquittal' Polat said after the hearing that even though
    the Justice Ministry gave permission in February for the case to
    continue under Turkey's controversial Article 301, a loosely-defined
    law that criminalizes insulting the Turkish nation, "in my opinion
    the documents gathered in the file demand an acquittal."

    "There is no information, no document, no details, nothing," Polat
    said. "There is just a video, showing the named people together, but
    what they are saying cannot be heard. It was shot in an open area, not
    a secret place, and there is no indication it was under any pressure."

    But prosecution lawyer Murat Inan told Compass, "Of course there is
    evidence. That's why the Justice Ministry continued the case. This is
    a large 'orgut' [a term connoting an illegal and armed organization],
    and they need to be stopped from doing this propaganda here."

    At the close of the hearing, Inan told the court that there were
    missing issues concerning the judicial legality and activities of the
    "Bible research center" linked with the defendants that needed to be
    examined and exposed.

    Turkish press were conspicuously absent at yesterday's hearing, and
    except for one representative of the Turkish Protestant churches,
    there were no observers present.

    The first seven hearings in the trial had been mobbed by dozens of
    TV and print journalists, focused on ultranationalist lawyer Kemal
    Kerincsiz, who led a seven-member legal team for the prosecution.

    But since the January 2008 jailing of Kerincsiz and Sevgi Erenerol,
    who had accompanied him to all the Silivri trials, Turkish media
    interest in the case has dwindled. The two are alleged co-conspirators
    in the massive Ergenekon cabal accused of planning to overthrow the
    Turkish government.

    This week the European Commission's new "Turkey 2009 Progress Report"
    spelled out concerns about the problems of Turkey's non-Muslim
    communities.

    "Missionaries are widely perceived as a threat to the integrity of
    the country and to the Muslim religion," the Oct. 14 report stated.

    "Further efforts are needed to create an environment conducive to
    full respect of freedom of religion in particular."

    In specific reference to Tastan and Topal's case, the report noted:
    "A court case against two missionaries in Silivri continued; it
    was also expanded after the Ministry of Justice allowed judicial
    proceedings under Article 301 of the Criminal Code."

    The Turkish constitution guarantees freedom of religion to all its
    citizens, and the nation's legal codes specifically protect missionary
    activities.

    "I trust our laws on this. But psychologically, our judges and
    prosecutors are not ready to implement this yet," Polat said. "They
    look at Christian missionaries from their own viewpoint; they aren't
    able to look at them in a balanced way."
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