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Turkey's Enlightenment Languishes, Like The Journalists In Its Priso

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  • Turkey's Enlightenment Languishes, Like The Journalists In Its Priso

    TURKEY'S ENLIGHTENMENT LANGUISHES, LIKE THE JOURNALISTS IN ITS PRISONS

    The record number of reporters imprisoned in Turkey threatens to
    extinguish the flame of democratic reform

    guardian.co.uk
    Tuesday 13 March 2012 16.39 GMT

    Ahmet Sik Turkish journalist Ahmet Sik (C) hugs his friends after he
    being released from prison in Istanbul. Photograph: Sinan Gul/Anadolu
    Agency/EPA

    A year ago, police burst into the homes of two of Turkey's best
    investigative journalists, Nedim Sener and Ahmet Sik, and carted
    them off to prison where they remained until last night, charged with
    crimes so nebulous even prosecutors can't explain them.

    They are not alone. Turkey now holds the world record for locking
    up journalists, leaving Iran and China scrabbling in the dust, with
    by most reckonings 103 reporters behind bars, as opposed to 42 in
    Tehran and 27 in China. More journalists were arrested in Istanbul
    in one morning over Christmas than the Chinese managed all year -
    who says Europe can no longer compete?

    Sik and Sener's dramatic release on bail yesterday after an
    international outcry hopefully shows the Turkish authorities are
    finally coming to their senses. Both men are nevertheless still
    looking at up to 15 years in prison for basically doing their job.

    The exact number of journalists in prison awaiting trial is hard to
    pin down - estimates range from eight to 122, with 103 being the
    most generally accepted - because the charges against them can be
    kept secret under Turkey's draconian anti-terrorist laws. The lowest
    figure is a provisional one from the New York-based Committee for the
    Protection of Journalists, which believes its final verified count
    may top 90. Another 30 press workers are in jail, rounded up under
    laws drafted by the country's former military rulers and enforced by
    a judiciary cut from the same cloth.

    Two columnists from the website Oda TV, who had also been held in
    solitary confinement in the same prison as Sik and Sener, were also
    bailed last night. But as they were hugged and cheered by their
    families and supporters, other journalists were still being arrested.

    On Saturday night, Ozlem Agus became the 106th journalist to be jailed,
    accused of "spreading terrorist propaganda" by breaking the story of
    the rape and sexual abuse of minors charged with terrorist offences
    held in an adult prison near Adana. Having ignored his reporting
    for months, the government was forced to react to the scandal last
    week. The price was Agus's freedom. The following day, another Kurdish
    reporter was remanded in custody accused of the same crime.

    This has all come amid a blizzard of prosecutions of journalists that
    now tops 4,000, the latest brought this weekend by the prime minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who claims the independent daily Taraf injured
    his dignity by imputing in an editorial that he had become increasingly
    "arrogant, uninformed and uninterested" in reform.

    So how could a country that is held up as a poster boy for democratic
    reform and economic success, the model Muslim democracy for the Arab
    spring to follow, go quite so horribly wrong?

    The answer, or much of it, lies in that police raid last March on
    the homes of Sik and Sener, and shows how Turkey's once reformist
    government has succumbed to the same old repressive paranoia of the
    military-nationalist establishment it was elected to clear away nearly
    10 years ago.

    Sik and Sener have spent years winning international awards for
    excavating the Turkish "deep state", the shadowy cabals within the
    military and civil service who staged four coups in as many decades
    in the name of protecting Ataturk's secular legacy, and shackled
    Turkey with its present constitution, the most authoritarian this
    side of Pyongyang.

    Yet they ended up in prison as a part of the 18th wave of arrests into
    another putative coup, the so-called Ergenekon conspiracy to overthrow
    Erdogan's moderately Islamic AK party government - a plot revealed by
    none other than Sik and his colleagues at the Nokta magazine. Sener had
    meanwhile exposed staggering official negligence, if not connivance,
    in the murder of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, and was
    in the process of linking the killing to Ergenekon. (To give you an
    idea of how surreally skewed press freedom in Turkey is, prosecutors
    initially demanded Sener serve a longer sentence for revealing the
    scandal than the one they demanded for Dink's killers.)

    It would be funny if the circumstances of the Dink case were not so
    horribly tragic. And then it got even worse. The police began bugging
    the two journalists' phones, hoping to piggy-back on their inquiries,
    having arrested 700 military figures and other government opponents
    over four years with little or nothing to show for it investigating
    Ergenekon and another alleged coup plot.

    In so doing, they discovered Sik was writing a book on a "second deep
    state", one run in opposition to the Kemalist military by police
    officers, business leaders and AK party politicians loyal to the
    exiled theologian Fethullah Gulen, often hailed as the visionary
    behind Turkey's democratic Islamic enlightenment.

    The Gulen movement - a kind of sufi freemasons where secrecy and
    jobs for the boys are squared by good works and the common goal of
    a Turkey guided by a revived, scientific Islam - owns the country's
    biggest selling newspaper, Zaman, controls hundreds of Jesuit-style
    schools turning out its new, religiously minded elite and various
    charities and TV channels.

    Suddenly, Sik the man who stymied the nascent military coup against
    the government was accused of being part of it. Police not only seized
    his unfinished manuscript on the Gulen movement, The Army of the Imam,
    they destroyed it, and began a paperchase to destroy any other copies
    that might exist.

    Gulen may preach openness and tolerance of other faiths, but the
    movement run in his name is a model of opacity - understandably so
    given the history of repression of similar dervish orders by the old,
    rigidly Kemalist elite. Sadly, however, the new observant elite appear
    to have inherited their secular predecessors' love of conspiracy,
    as well as their fearsome arsenal of repressive laws.

    None of which bodes well for justice and transparency in the new Turkey
    Gulen and his millions of followers want to create, particularly
    when the prime minister and AK party luminaries brand journalists
    who criticise them as "criminals and terrorists".

    Turkey is a much freer country today than the day the AK party came to
    power, and much of that is also due to the Gulen movement. But it is a
    funny kind of freedom, one where the internet is tracked and restricted
    and where freedom of speech comes at a price. Turkey stands proud again
    on the world stage as a major player and model to the Muslim world,
    yet at home no one risks being entirely open, nor entirely honest.

    In this atmosphere, with renewed violence and repression in the Kurdish
    south-east, chest-beating nationalism, and such public tension between
    the devout and the secular that MPs cannot debate an education bill
    without two mass brawls in a week, a new constitution to replace
    the old military one is finally being broached. Erdogan, the rock
    on which hopes of reform once rested, has entered his third term
    in power ill and ill-tempered, his absolute majority in parliament
    fighting yesterday's sectarian battles. The Turkish enlightenment may
    not yet be completely dead, but its flame is fading, locked away in
    the jails where so many journalists are now being held.

    Let's hope for all our sakes it gets a second chance of life.




    From: A. Papazian
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