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  • Turkey's Press Continues To Feel Pressure From The State

    TURKEY'S PRESS CONTINUES TO FEEL PRESSURE FROM THE STATE

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-20083163
    29 October 2012 Last updated at 11:41

    Friends of Hrant Dink on march in Istanbul in January 2012 The death
    of Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist killed in 2007, has been
    blamed by some on Turkish authorities, despite an arrest and conviction

    Turkey has put more journalists in jail than any other country,
    thanks to strict laws which punish dissent against the state. Critics
    says the state is stifling free speech, while the government says
    it is curbing propaganda by Kurdish separatists. Is the treatment of
    reporters hurting Turkey's chances of joining the EU?

    Istanbul's Palace of Justice, Europe's largest courthouse, is
    a towering structure of glass and aluminium that dominates the
    surrounding neighbourhood. In one of its dozens of courtrooms one of
    the world's largest trials of journalists is slowly progressing.

    In all, 44 reporters, drawn mainly from Kurdish publications and news
    agencies, are on trial under the country's anti-terrorism laws. If
    found guilty, they could all face long prison sentences.

    The first hearing in September drew international publicity, but
    ended in chaos with the defendants demanding to speak in Kurdish and
    the judge angrily berating their lawyers.

    "It is scandalous," said Turkish parliamentary deputy Ertugrul Kurkcu
    of pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party. "It indicates this trial
    is going a bad way."

    Some, however, think that the fact there is a trial at all is a step
    in the right direction. "It is better than the past," says Huseyin
    Akyol, editor of the pro-Kurdish newspaper Ozgur Gundem, eight of
    whose staff are on trial.

    "START QUOTE

    Literally anything can be considered as supporting terrorism and
    according to the law that makes you a terrorist"

    End Quote Emma Sinclair Webb Human Rights Watch

    Mr Akyol, a 23-year veteran of the paper, offers a stark perspective.

    "In the 90s the state killed us, we lost 76 journalists and
    distributors and they blew up our offices. Now they just imprison us -
    although life in prison is difficult."

    Turkey currently tops the world for jailed reporters. A report
    published this month by the US-based Committee to Protect Journalists
    found 76 journalists were imprisoned as of 1 August, of which 61 were
    identified as being detained because of their reporting.

    But the government claims most are not legitimate journalists but
    rather "propagandists" for the Kurdish rebel group PKK, which has
    been fighting the Turkish state for autonomy since 1984.

    "[There is] no difference between the bullets fired and the articles
    written in Ankara," said Interior Minister Naim Idris Sahin in a
    speech this September.

    Critics say this mentality lies at the heart of Turkey's anti-terror
    laws and why so many journalists are ending up behind bars.

    "The anti-terror laws are so broadly written. Literally anything
    can be considered as supporting terrorism and according to the law
    that makes you a terrorist," says Emma Sinclair Webb, the Turkish
    representative of the US-based Human Rights Watch.

    "You must start changing a lot of laws and the mentality of the courts,
    which put people in prison for long periods unquestioningly."

    Alarm bells

    The long arm of the Turkish law has extended into mainstream journalism
    as well.

    "I was driving my child to school and on the radio I heard the police
    were making arrests in relation to a conspiracy against the government,
    I was shocked when they said I was one of those to be arrested,"
    journalist Nedim Sener tells the BBC, sitting with his wife in his
    apartment after a long spell in jail.

    Placard calling for journalists' release outside Istanbul courthouse
    in 2012 Supporters called for the release of Nedim Sener and Ahmet Sik

    Mr Sener has won international journalism awards for work which has
    included investigating an alleged conspiracy by the Turkish army
    and state against the present government. Now he is accused of being
    involved in the very conspiracy he had been investigating.

    "Our cell was for three people. For 13 months we didn't see anybody
    else other than each other. I can describe the place as a concrete
    grave. A place that people are left to decay."

    He blames his detention on his ongoing investigation into the 2007
    murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, which is widely
    blamed on elements within the Turkish state.

    The government denies the charge, saying that authorities successfully
    caught and convicted Dink's murderer.

    But, while one man was convicted, in January, the court acquitted
    19 others.

    And although the court rejected the allegation of a state conspiracy,
    a heated debate about that continues in Turkey.

    Fethiye Cetin, representing the Dink family, slammed the decision
    outside the court, saying it meant "a tradition was left untouched:
    the state tradition of political murders".

    EU criticism

    The imprisonment of high profile journalists like Mr Sener and his
    colleague Ahmet Sik set alarm bells ringing across Turkey, and beyond.

    "There is absolutely no doubt, I have to say, that some of them
    [journalists] are in jail because they have written or broadcast things
    which are unpalatable to the government and to the authorities in this
    country," stated Richard Howitt, member of the European Parliament's
    Foreign Affairs Committee.

    "That is not just unpalatable to those of us in Brussels and European
    Union. It is unacceptable."

    "START QUOTE

    Dangerous generalisations were reached through these isolated
    incidents"

    End Quote Ergemen Bagis Minister for EU Relations

    Large protests calling for Mr Sener and Mr Sik's release were
    attended by some of the country's most well-known journalists and
    news presenters. The journalists were eventually released this March,
    after their charges were reduced - although their case continues.

    Their release was possible under government legal reforms.

    The government claims it is committed to further reform, saying new
    legislation in parliament will address growing criticism. "Thoughts
    should not be restricted by any limit," declared deputy Prime
    Minister Besir Atalay on Press Freedom Day last July, acknowledging
    that problems still exist. "In our current legislation, we still have
    some regulations keeping thoughts and violence together."

    But such commitment was not enough for the European Union, which
    criticised Ankara's "increasing tendency to imprison journalists,
    media workers and distributors," in an annual progress report on
    Turkey's membership bid, published this month.

    "Freedom of the media continued to be further restricted in practice,"
    it said.

    Turkish soldiers on patrol on the Turkey/Iraq border in 2008 Turkey's
    long-running conflict with Kurdish separatists is one cause of curbs
    on press freedom

    The report was immediately dismissed by Ankara. "Too much emphasis
    was placed on isolated incidents, and dangerous generalisations were
    reached through these isolated incidents," countered Ergemen Bagis,
    Turkey's minister for EU relations.

    'Dangerous course'

    The Turkish media is dominated by owners with other commercial
    interests, many of whom are competing for lucrative government
    contracts. Aydin Dogan, one of the country's most prominent
    businessman, was forced to pay a tax fine of $1bn in September 2009,
    sending shockwaves through Turkey.

    The fine followed the publication by one of his newspapers of
    a German judge accusing senior members of the Turkish ruling AK
    party of involvement in Germany's biggest charity fraud case. The
    government strongly denied involvement in the fraud - or collusion
    with the tax investigation.

    "START QUOTE

    Society is not talking about it, the fear has spread around the public"

    End Quote Nedim Sener Journalist

    "Self-censorship now is the basic instinct determining journalist
    behaviour when they write a news report," says Kadri Gursel, a
    columnist for the Milliyet newspaper.

    "Why? Because of the fear of media bosses, who fear to be punished
    by the government who can do this in various ways. For journalists
    the minimum threat is to be fired, the maximum is jail."

    One anonymous journalist says: "When the new owner met us, he said:
    'I am not interested in stories about the prime minister's son owning
    big boats'."

    The government says the media in Turkey is still free. Turkey's tough
    stance towards the Syrian regime is the subject of withering criticism
    by much of the mainstream media. The country has also witnessed a
    phenomenal rise in the alternative news through social media.

    But for many reporters the profession has become an increasingly
    risky occupation. Mr Sener, only recently freed from prison, is
    not optimistic.

    "Journalists are afraid, but what is worse is that society is not
    talking about it, the fear has spread around the public. They are
    not breathing. And I see this as a very dangerous course for Turkey."

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