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Turkey faces heavier censorship with new Internet law

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  • Turkey faces heavier censorship with new Internet law

    Channel NewsAsia
    February 7, 2014 Friday 8:04 AM GMT


    Turkey faces heavier censorship with new Internet law

    by Anna Tuson



    ISTANBUL: The European Union (EU) has expressed "serious concerns"
    over Turkey's new Internet law, which approves the blocking of web
    pages within hours without a prior court order. The government said
    the new law is aimed at protecting individual privacy. But critics
    said that with freedom of speech already restricted through bans,
    arrests of journalists and alleged pressure by politicians, Turkey is
    becoming more conservative.

    Censorship in Turkey has a long history. The Ottoman king, Sultan
    Abdül Hamid, apparently forbid the word nose from being printed,
    because he hated his large nose. In modern-day Turkey, books,
    newspapers and other media continue to face heavy censorship.
    Political satire, sex and controversial history are frequently banned,
    and the offending artists and writers can face fines, job loss and
    even imprisonment. Cartoonist Halil Inescu has had 250 pieces of work
    censored, and the magazine he works for has even been bombed. After
    completing one particularly controversial political cartoon, he was
    sentenced to 10 months in prison and banned from drawing political
    cartoons for three years. I never self-censored because of the legal
    authorities -- I count that as a shameful thing. I m really against
    self-censorship and censorship. I never accept it, said Halil Inescu.
    Artists are not the only ones refusing to accept the status quo.
    Journalist Yavuz Baydar was fired from his job as an independent
    ombudsman for the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah, after he criticised
    the lack of coverage of the Gezi protests. Censorship has always
    been a habit, a pattern in Turkish media, mainly because of a culture
    of intolerance, but also because of the authorities way of trying to
    control public opinion and the flow of opinion, said Yavuz Baydar.
    The Turkish Publishers Association has suffered greatly for the right
    to voice opinion and talk freely about difficult issues. The books it
    produces are often banned the day they are published. But there are
    small victories. Ragip Zarakolu, Turkish Publishers Association
    chairman, said: My wife, as an editor, was sentenced to two years in
    prison because she published a book about the Armenian Genocide, but
    we went on to publish books about the genocide, and now it s possible
    in Turkey to publish books on it. Today, there are fewer court cases
    concerning censorship, but this is mostly because artists are
    censoring themselves. While some progress has been made, the use of
    censorship is still commonplace. Taboos remain on criticising the
    military and government, as well as religion and sex. Meanwhile, those
    that value pluralism, debate and democracy will continue to fight for
    self-expression and freedom of speech.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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