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'Everyone Is Afraid': Erdogan Regime Cows Embattled Media

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  • 'Everyone Is Afraid': Erdogan Regime Cows Embattled Media

    'EVERYONE IS AFRAID': ERDOGAN REGIME COWS EMBATTLED MEDIA

    By Michael Sontheimer

    There are more journalists in prison in Turkey than in any other
    country. Prime Minister Erdogan tolerates no criticism, and aggressive
    prosecution of journalists on often questionable charges has fostered
    an atmosphere of anxiety and self-censorship.

    It was mostly angry office workers from Istanbul's Maslak banking
    district who appeared on Monday, June 3, during their lunch break
    at the editorial offices of the NTV news channel. "Stop acting as if
    nothing were happening," they chanted, as they railed against what they
    called the "bought media." "We can pay you, too," the roughly 3,000
    demonstrators shouted, mocking the NTV employees who had managed to
    completely ignore the anti-government protests that had already been
    going on for three days. The protestors had glued Turkish lira bank
    notes to their banners.

    The editors at CNN Turk also fell short of expectations. While CNN
    International showed live images of the dramatic clashes between
    police and protesters, the Turkish channel aired a documentary about
    penguins. Many newspapers complied with the de facto news blackout.

    Whether the journalists were following government instructions or
    simply suppressing the news in an act of preemptive obedience is
    still unclear.

    Freedom of the press and diversity of opinion have been in jeopardy
    in Turkey, and not just since the current unrest began some two weeks
    ago. After years of persecution, no other country in the world -- not
    even China or Iran -- has more journalists in prison than Turkey, which
    hopes to be accepted into the European Union. It's an embarrassing
    world record.

    The group Reporters Without Borders was able to verify that 36
    journalists are currently behind bars in Turkey. The country's
    journalists' union puts the number of media representatives in prison
    at 62, while the European Federation of Journalists says that there
    are 66.

    Still, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) deny that journalists are persecuted in
    Turkey. "Some of these negative reports are written on commission,"
    Erdogan stated on television. "Their sources are wrong."

    Repressive Laws

    Zeynep Kuray can only laugh derisively at Erdogan's claim, as she
    sits in the garden of a cafe on the Bosporus and talks about her
    experiences with the Turkish legal system. In December 2011, at 5 a.m.,
    five plainclothes police officers presented her with a search warrant
    for the apartment in the Istanbul district of Kadikoy she shares with
    her mother.

    Kuray, 35, was only one of 36 primarily Kurdish journalists arrested
    in Turkey that morning. After she had spent three days in the Istanbul
    police prison, a prosecutor informed her that she was being accused
    of being a member of a terrorist organization, the media committee of
    the Union of Communities in Kurdistan (KCK). He claimed that the KCK
    was a cover for the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which wanted to
    create a Kurdish nation with armed force. It took eight months until
    the public prosecutor's office filed charges, which finally enabled
    Kuray to learn the details of the accusations against her. According
    to the indictment, she had disparaged the Turkish state and fomented
    unrest among the Kurds with her reports for a Kurdish news agency
    and the left-leaning Istanbul daily Birgun.

    Kuray was released on bail at the end of April, but most of her
    fellow journalists are still in custody. In its 800-page indictment,
    which relies on dubious evidence, the public prosecutor's office
    accuses Kuray and 45 other journalists of membership in a terrorist
    organization or spreading propaganda for such an organization. The
    trial has been underway since September 2012 in the court building at
    the Silivri prison complex, 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of Istanbul.

    "Turkey's counterterrorism laws are archaic and repressive," says
    Christophe Deloire, the general secretary of Reporters Without
    Borders, whose international operations are based in Paris. Under
    Article 7, Section 2 of the country's anti-terror law, spreading
    "propaganda for a terrorist organization" carries a penalty of two
    to seven-and-a-half years in prison. However, it can already be seen
    as propaganda when journalists report on demonstrations in Kurdistan,
    quote Kurds critical of the government or even speak with them.

    The defense attorneys' options are limited in the mass trials, which
    involve dozens of defendants. The judges on the "Tribunals with Special
    Powers" can interrupt trials as they see fit, and for as long as they
    wish. As a result, the accused can be held in pretrial detention for
    three years or more, which amounts to preventive punishment without
    sentence.

    The case of the Berlin correspondent for the left-leaning daily
    newspaper Evrensel, Huseyin Deniz, shows how tenuous the charges can
    be. Deniz, who had long worked for Kurdish dailies, visited his sick
    mother in Istanbul in late 2011. The police arrested him on the same
    morning as Zeynep Kuray.

    Deniz, 45, has now been in pretrial detention in Kandira Prison for
    16 months. With one monthly exception, he is allowed only one visitor
    a week, who can then speak with him by telephone on the other side
    of a glass wall. According to the indictment, Deniz was part of the
    management of the supposed terrorist media committee. In that position,
    he allegedly attended a secret meeting in northern Iraq. The accusation
    is based on a statement made by a witness identified only by her code
    name. But his sister says that he was in Berlin at the time of the
    alleged meeting in Iraq, and that the stamps in his passport prove it.

    Intimidation and Self-Censorship

    Activists with the Turkish journalists' union demonstrated in front of
    the palace of justice in Istanbul in early May, on World Press Freedom
    Day. They flew 62 kites, as a sign of protest against the imprisonment
    of 62 journalists. Before the event, the union had complained about
    the "massive pressure and threats" emanating from representatives of
    the government.

    Prime Minister Erdogan ordinarily perceives criticism of his
    administration's policies as a personal attack, and yet he isn't
    above publicly attacking individual journalists. He has reportedly
    called upon publishers -- repeatedly and successfully -- to dismiss
    insubordinate editors.

    In response to the liberal daily Milliyet's publication of a secret
    document, he raved: "If this is journalism, then down with your
    journalism." The premier, in office for the last 10 years, also likes
    to use laws governing the press to take action against journalists. He
    has ordered three new lawsuits to be filed this year.

    "The Islamists don't want diversity of the press," says noted
    investigative journalist Ahmet Sik, 43. He had conducted extensive
    research for a book on the Islamist Gulen movement, but he was arrested
    shortly before its publication. The leftist author spent more than
    a year in prison because of the absurd charge that he was part of a
    right-wing military conspiracy. He and two fellow authors were kept
    in complete isolation in a high-security wing of the prison in Silivri.

    When he was released on bail in March 2012, he said angrily: "If the
    police officers, public prosecutors and judges who forged this plot
    are imprisoned here one day, justice will have been served." Sik
    has now been charged with threatening and defaming civil servants,
    offences for which he could face up to seven years in prison.

    When Gezi Park at Taksim Square was being cleared, the police shot
    a tear gas cartridge at his head at close range. Sik collapsed,
    covered in blood. According to Reporters Without Borders, at least 14
    journalists have already been injured, some severely, during reporting
    on the protests against the Erdogan government. "All journalists in
    Turkey are afraid," says Sik, "afraid of being fired and afraid of
    being arrested." The government, he adds, is trying to intimidate
    and silence all critics, which leads to self-censorship.

    Ignoring International Condemnation

    Sik, who teaches journalism as the private Istanbul Bilgi University,
    says that he can only advise his students to work in the profession
    once the media are given significantly more freedom. Of the 20 students
    who have completed his courses, 18 have soon turned their backs on
    a media career, he adds.

    In addition to facing government persecution, journalists see their
    lives complicated by the patronizing attitudes of publishers and
    editors-in-chief. Large companies with operations in various sectors
    own the majority of Turkish media organizations. Management routinely
    demands that journalists favor the government in their reporting, so
    as to improve their chances of securing lucrative government contracts,
    for example.

    The more or less systematic suppression of journalists in Turkey is
    so obvious that even the European Commission and the US Department
    of State have expressed concern over freedom of the press in Turkey.

    Memet Kilic, a Green Party member of the German parliament, says:
    "Erdogan is kicking free speech with his feet." But such accusations
    have fallen on deaf ears and been just as unsuccessful as more
    diplomatic efforts to intervene. When German Chancellor Angela Merkel
    visited Ankara in late February, she said that she had "pointed out
    that we would like to see journalists able to work freely and not be
    kept in custody for so long."

    Erdogan flatly contradicted the chancellor at the joint press
    conference. "No more than a handful" of journalists had been arrested
    in Turkey, he said, and "not because of their articles, but because
    they are putschists, arms smugglers and terrorists."

    If Turkish prosecutors are to be believed, investigative journalist Sik
    is also a dangerous putschist. He expects that he will be sentenced
    toward the end of the year, and he could very well be sent to prison
    again. His 12-year-old daughter has urged him to turn to writing
    cookbooks.

    But that isn't a future Sik wants for himself. Instead, he is currently
    working on a book about the Turkish judiciary.

    Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

    http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/media-repression-in-turkey-intimidates-and-imprisons-journalists-a-905164.html

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