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Ã-zgüden: Int'l Pressure Needed To Stop Jailing Of Journalists In Tu

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  • Ã-zgüden: Int'l Pressure Needed To Stop Jailing Of Journalists In Tu

    http://www.info-turk.be/412.htm#International_

    Ã-zgüden: International Pressure Needed To Stop Jailing Of
    Journalists In Turkey

    Inteview by RFE/RL on December 12, 2012:

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) says a record 232
    journalists are currently imprisoned around the world, with Turkey
    being the worst offender. In a report released December 11, the
    U.S.-based media watchdog says 49 journalists are behind bars in
    Turkey -- a NATO member and EU candidate country - compared with 45 in
    Iran and 32 in China.

    The CPJ says most of the imprisoned Turkish journalists are Kurdish
    reporters and editors held on terror-related charges and in connection
    with alleged antigovernment plots. Turkey was already subjected to
    harsh criticism in an EU progress report in October, which listed
    freedom of expression, as well as the right to a fair trial, as areas
    of particular concern.

    RFE/RL correspondent Eugen Tomiuc talked to exiled Turkish journalist
    Dogan Ozguden, the head of the Brussels-based Journalists' Association
    of Turkey, about the report's findings.

    RFE/RL: Mr. Ozguden, there is still an arrest warrant in your name in
    Turkey, the country which you left decades ago to escape jail. You
    risk being thrown in jail for insulting the Turkish military by
    calling for the democratization of the country after years of military
    dictatorship. How would you rate press freedom in Turkey?

    Ozguden: I am a 76-year-old journalist, and from the beginning of my
    career I have not seen anything else than [journalist]
    prosecutions. Turkey is now an EU candidate, and it has promised to
    fulfill all the obligations in the democracy and liberty fields. In
    the beginning, [Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's] Islamist
    government said it will respect all the criteria. But unfortunately
    for the past three or four years, the pressure on the opposition --
    and particularly on the press -- increased.

    RFE/RL: The Committee to Protect Journalists said in its report that
    broadly worded antiterrorism and penal code articles allow Turkish
    authorities "to conflate the coverage of banned groups and the
    investigation of sensitive topics with outright terrorism or other
    antistate activity." How accurate is this statement?

    Ozguden: [The Islamist government is] using the pretext of supporting
    terrorist movements to arrest all the journalists who are not
    considered "reasonable" by Erdogan's government.

    RFE/RL: Prime Minister Erdogan's government has pushed forward with
    the prosecution and conviction of hundreds of army officers accused of
    plotting a coup. Prosecutors have said that what they called Operation
    Sledgehammer was a conspiracy by the army to trigger a coup against
    Erdogan's elected government, an accusation sharply rejected by the
    army, which has long seen itself as the guarantor of the country's
    secular constitution. The country is also in the grips of a
    decades-long Kurdish insurgency. Could these be reasonable arguments
    for a harsher attitude toward those suspected of supporting the
    alleged conspirators or Kurdish terrorists?

    Ozguden: Under the pretext of combating the military putchists,
    they've arrested many people who have nothing to do with the military
    conspirators' movement. Most important, in terms of Kurdish
    journalists -- they are in different prisons in Turkey under the
    accusation of supporting the PKK. Any declaration, any criticism, or
    any call for Kurdish rights is considered support for the terrorist
    movement.

    Many journalists, even not Kurdish journalists who are defending the
    fundamental rights of the Kurds or other minorities -- Assyrians,
    Armenians, and Greeks -- are considered terrorists or defenders of
    terrorism.

    RFE/RL: What are the most prominent cases of journalists currently
    imprisoned for exercising their profession?

    Ozguden: The most spectacular one is about 16 journalists -- among
    them, Mustafa Balbay, from the daily "Cumhuriyet," [and] television
    journalists Tuncay Ozkan and Soner Yalcin, who have been in prison for
    more than two years [for allegedly supporting the army plotters] and
    [whose] trial is continuing.

    After that, there are many Kurdish journalists -- particularly from
    the "Azadiya Welat" Kurdish newspaper or Dicle News Agency. They are
    subjected to prosecution continuously.

    RFE/RL: Do you think that the international community is doing enough
    to bring about a change in the way the government deals with freedom
    of expression?

    Ozguden: I am very thankful to the international professional
    organizations like the Committee to Protect Journalists, or the
    International Press Institute, or the International Federation of
    Journalists, or Reporters Sans Frontieres. They are always very
    attentive at defending the imprisoned Turkish or Kurdish
    journalists. They have accepted that these people are accused and
    prosecuted and condemned because of ideas, not for their political
    activities or terrorist activities. All these organizations are
    unanimously defending all journalists in Turkish prisons.

    RFE/RL: Turkey is an important player in the Middle East and its
    contribution to regional stability is substantial, especially during
    this period of growing instability in places like Syria or Egypt. Is
    the balancing act by NATO and the EU in their relations with Turkey
    successful enough?

    Ozguden: As for the international institutions like NATO, the European
    Union, the Council of Europe, even the United Nations, unfortunately
    they are not so attentive toward these burning questions [on human
    rights and freedom of expression]. For example, the relations with the
    Turkish regime are maintained without taking into consideration all
    these violations of press freedom. These institutions and
    organizations should change their attitude and put more pressure on
    the Turkish government.

    RFE/RL: But the EU on October 10 issued a very critical progress
    report on candidate Turkey...

    Ozguden: Yes, critical, I agree. But there is no practical
    pressure. They say that these, these, and these [rights] are not
    respected. OK, but what is the result? The result should be sanctions
    against the Turkish government. But such sanctions are not being
    applied. Why? Because of geopolitical and strategic issues, the
    problems with the Middle East countries, and for all these reasons,
    despite their criticism, they are not applying sufficient pressure on
    the Turkish regime.

    RFE/RL: You yourself have been subjected in absentia to an arrest
    warrant under the notorious Article 301, whose abolition has been
    demanded by many rights watchdogs. Can you describe Article 301?

    Ozguden: For example, insulting the president of the republic or the
    prime minister or the Turkish Army. If you criticize one of these
    institutions, there is always the Article 301 of the Turkish penal
    code. And naturally, there are many private trials opened [under
    Article 301] by Prime Minister Erdogan against many journalists
    demanding very high fines for insulting [him].
    http://www.rferl.org/content/journalists-imprisoned-turkey-cpj-interview-ozguden/24796225.html

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    From: Baghdasarian
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