Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish-Armenian Writer Handed Jail Sentence For Blasphemy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish-Armenian Writer Handed Jail Sentence For Blasphemy

    Carbonated.tv
    May 22 2013


    Turkish-Armenian Writer Handed Jail Sentence For Blasphemy


    An Istanbul court has sentenced a Turkish-Armenian author and blogger
    to more than a year in prison for insulting the Prophet Mohammad,
    local media reported on Wednesday, weeks after a similar case caused
    alarm among secularists.

    Sevan Nisanyan, who has authored several books and who runs a blog on
    what he describes as "history, religion and a (little) politics",
    posted a link to the offending blog on his Twitter account following
    the ruling.

    The accompanying message read: "Let's share the article that brought a
    sentence of 13.5 months from the Istanbul 10th Criminal Court for
    insulting religious bla bla bla."

    Just over a month ago, world-renowned concert pianist Fazil Say was
    handed a suspended jail sentence for insulting religious values on
    Twitter, including one tweet poking fun at a muezzin, someone who
    makes the Muslim call to prayer.

    Say's sentence stirred passions about the role religion should play in
    Turkish public life and highlighted how much has changed since Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party, which has roots in Islamist
    politics, swept to power a decade ago.

    Erdogan's AK Party has witnessed unprecedented prosperity and is
    admired among Western allies keen to portray NATO member Turkey as a
    beacon of political stability in a troubled region.

    But Erdogan's opponents have increasingly accused him of posing a
    threat to the modern, secular republic founded by Kemal Ataturk on the
    ruins of the Ottoman empire 90 years ago.

    They also say a judiciary once renowned for defending the secular
    republic against Islamist influence now finds itself answering to
    religious conservatives.

    Nisanyan was sentenced to one year and 45 days for a blog post last
    year entitled "Hate speech needs to be combatted" in which he wrote:

    "It is not hate speech to make fun of an Arab leader who claimed he
    had contacted Allah hundreds of years ago and received political,
    financial and sexual benefits accordingly.

    "It is a test of freedom of expression at an almost kindergarten-level."

    Media reported that the sentence could not be converted to a financial
    penalty but that Nisanyan had a right to appeal. The court could not
    be immediately reached for comment.

    Reuters

    http://www.carbonated.tv/news/turkisharmenian-writer-handed-jail-sentence-for-blasphemy




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X