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  • Turkey: Government Using "Tax Terror" To Muzzle Independent Press --

    TURKEY: GOVERNMENT USING "TAX TERROR" TO MUZZLE INDEPENDENT PRESS -- CRITICS
    Yigal Schleifer

    Eurasia Insight
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar ticles/eav091409b.shtml
    9/14/09

    Is the Turkish government trying to break the back of a media
    conglomerate that has served as its most vocal opposition by slapping
    it with a whopping $2.5 billion tax penalty?

    That¡¯s the question being asked in Turkey and abroad after authorities
    levied a record-breaking fine on the Dogan Media Group, which publishes
    several influential newspapers (Hurriyet, Milliyet and Radikal among
    them) and owns CNN-Turk, the Turkish-language version of CNN, among
    other channels. The penalty (which nearly equals the entire value
    of the company) comes on the heels of a $500 million tax fine issued
    against Dogan a few months ago.

    "It raises question marks, absolutely," says Bulent Aliriza, director
    of the Turkey Project at the Washington-based Center for Strategic
    and International Studies. "The sum involved is astronomical. Clearly
    this is enough to break the back of any corporation and it opens up
    the question of what is the goal of the government?"

    According to Turkish tax officials, Dogan engaged in deceptive
    practices and failed to pay tax on income earned through the sale of
    a company and through the transfer of shares between companies within
    the group itself. According to the Dogan Group, everything has been
    above board and the government, through its taxmen, is out to get it
    by twisting the country¡¯s financial rules to suit its purposes.

    Over the last few years, the Dogan Group¡¯s media outlets have
    emerged as perhaps the most vocal critics of the governing Justice
    and Development Party (AKP). At one point earlier this year, Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan even called for his supporters to
    boycott the group¡¯s publications. Interestingly, relations between
    the AKP, which is moderate Islamic in its orientation, and the media
    group turned especially sour after some of the Dogan publications
    aggressively reported on the financial misdeeds committed by the
    German branch of a Turkish Islamic charity with close ties to the
    AKP leadership.

    According to its critics, the Turkish government is now involved in
    an attempt to silence one of its detractors, as part of a larger plan
    to create compliant media.

    The emergence in recent years of a powerful Islamic press and some
    questionable moves by the AKP - such as the sale of the bankrupt
    but influential Sabah ATV media conglomerate to a business group
    run by the prime minister¡¯s son-in-law - has given the government
    unprecedented influence in the media, critics charge.

    "Without any legal ground, such a practice could not be
    welcomed anywhere in the world," Fikret Bila, Milliyet¡¯s Ankara
    representative and one of Turkey¡¯s leading veteran journalists,
    recently wrote. "These two consecutive tax levies are nothing but
    ¡¯tax terror¡¯ against the company owner, Ayd¦¡¢Æn Dogan. This is
    obviously a confiscation process, not just tax penalties."

    The government insists the massive fine is simply the result of tax
    inspectors doing their job.

    What makes the case somewhat murky is the fact that Aydin Dogan,
    chairman of the Dogan organization, is not a scrappy newspaperman
    fighting for his life, but rather a media baron and business magnate
    who is a kind of Turkish Rupert Murdoch, controlling a very large
    slice of the Turkish media scene.

    Writing in the English-language Today¡¯s Zaman, columnist Andrew
    Finkel points out that "as Turkey¡¯s press baron extraordinaire,
    [Dogan] openly promoted his allies and intimidated his foes to
    carve out a world favorable to himself." Finkel added that the Dogan
    Group has faced criticism for blurring the lines "between editorial
    independence and financial self-interest."

    Tax officials and Dogan might enter into negotiations that could
    lead to a settlement of some kind, but observers inside and outside
    Turkey say the size of the initial fine does raise questions about
    press freedom in the country.

    The European Union, which Turkey hopes to join, has already expressed
    its concern, with a spokesman in Brussels stating; "When the sanction
    is of such magnitude that it threatens the very existence of an entire
    press group, like in this case, then freedom of the press is at stake."

    And in a recently released statement, the powerful Turkish
    Industrialists¡¯ and Businessmen¡¯s Associations (TUSIAD) took the
    government to task for its action against the Dogan Group. "These
    enforcements, which comply with neither justice, nor the concept
    of modern tax and revenue administration, target press freedom and
    pluralism besides creating unrecoverable material and moral losses,"
    the statement said. "The situation makes the sincerity of Turkey¡¯s
    recent democratization process questionable, also endangering its
    sustainability.

    Editor's Note: Yigal Schleifer is a freelance journalist based in
    Istanbul.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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