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Freedom House Report On Turkey Misguided

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  • Freedom House Report On Turkey Misguided

    FREEDOM HOUSE REPORT ON TURKEY MISGUIDED

    AL MONITOR
    May 15 2014

    Author: Rasim Ozan KutahyaliPosted May 15, 2014

    Turkey obviously has problems with its freedom of press and
    expression. I had acknowledged this reality in my two previous
    Al-Monitor articles. But it is also true that significant progress has
    been achieved in freedom of expression over the past 10 years. Until
    a few years ago, "Kurdistan" was a taboo word. Anyone who used it
    would instantly be declared a traitor by the mainstream media, and
    prosecutors would seek prison sentences for the offenders.

    Turkey today may still have some problems, but the former Kemalist
    regime was an outright hell. The Turkish press had to call Kurdistan
    "Northern Iraq." This nonsense is done with. Today, many writers freely
    refer to Turkey's southeast as North Kurdistan. In the old Turkey,
    if you called Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan "Mr. Ocalan," your media
    career would have ended right there. If you spoke of Ocalan, you had
    to add "master terrorist." Today, many commentators appear on major
    TV channels and praise Ocalan's political attitude.

    Only extreme nationalists and the pro-Fethullah Gulen movement media
    denounce Ocalan and the Kurdish movement these days.

    One of the major problems for freedom of press and expression in
    Turkey has been the issue of the 1915 Armenian genocide. Under the
    former regimes, you were required to outright deny it. Those like me
    who said there was genocide would be tried under Article 301 of the
    penal code. I have been there myself.

    Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk had to leave Turkey
    because of this situation. Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was made
    an object of hate by the mainstream media and in the end, he was
    assassinated.

    Today, there is no legal risk in acknowledging the Armenian genocide.

    Everyone is free to say what they want. I wrote eight successive
    columns in mainstream daily Sabah, and said as a Turkish society,
    we have to face the reality of the genocide. Five years ago, if I
    wrote anything remotely like it, I would be taken to court.

    But that there is a bizarre relationship between the government and
    media bosses when it comes to freedom of the press cannot be denied.

    This is nothing new, and hasn't changed under the Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) rule. These media bosses want financial
    perks and benefits from the state and use their media organs as
    instruments of pressure and blackmail. The government, of course,
    exploits the situation and frequently intervenes with the content of
    their newspapers. These people frequently call on the prime minister
    to intervene, which he does. As long as the media owners continue to
    do business with the government, this bizarre situation will continue.

    They must be legally banned from doing business with the state. This
    is the real issue of press freedom in Turkey.

    The Freedom House report did not even touch on this crucial issue. To
    list Turkey behind Kuwait in its latest report is unfair. How can it
    claim that the Kuwaiti media is freer than the Turkish one?

    Let me expand on this with concrete examples. In Turkey, we have 40
    daily newspapers with a total circulation of about 5,000,000. About
    65% of this total (about 3,300,000) belongs to opposition newspapers.

    Newspapers close to the ruling AKP have a total circulation of
    1,200,000. Sports newspapers have a readership of 500,000.

    The style of newspapers opposing Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is
    extremely brutal. Dozens of daily newspapers constantly refer to him as
    a "murderer," "thief" or "dictator." The pro-Gulen media label Erdogan
    as "pro-al Qaeda" and "pro-Iran." According to newspaper headlines
    from the extreme right and left, Erdogan is an American and Israeli
    agent. Can the Kuwaiti media say anything similar about Kuwait's emir?

    There is another interesting element. Freedom House was recognized
    in Turkey because of the efforts of political science professor
    Atilla Yayla, who is also the chairman of the Association for Liberal
    Thinking. Western liberals should read Yayla's views carefully. The
    winner of the Anthony Fisher Prize, Yayla was also given the Person of
    the Year Award by the Stockholm Network in 2007. I personally think
    that Freedom House project director Karin Deutsch Karlekar should
    have consulted with Yayla when writing the report on Turkey.

    As Turkish journalist Yildiray Ogur noted, the daily circulation of
    opposition papers such as Sozcu, Yenicag, Cumhuriyet, Taraf, Sol,
    Aydinlik, Yurt, Yeni Mesaj, Birgun, Today's Zaman and Orta Dogu is
    above 700,000. They appear every day with the apparent motto of "What
    did you do today to get rid of Erdogan?" They are dedicated to this
    cause. There are about 1,000 columnists in the national press. These
    writers, unlike any other group in the world, write between one to
    eight articles a week, mostly on politics. Yesterday, the Turkish
    newspapers printed 187 political columns. Of them, 123 were against
    the government, while 64 supported it.

    Meanwhile, we have heard Karlekar respond to the Turkish criticism
    of the Freedom House report. She said the report was written by
    a journalist-analyst who is well-known in the country and who is
    well-informed about what is happening. His suggestions were discussed
    at length and his points cross-checked with other sources, she said.

    Who is this well-known and well-informed journalist-analyst who
    wrote the Freedom House report? Karlekar said that unfortunately,
    the analyst had to remain anonymous out of fear of the pressure he
    may face, and had asked that his name not be disclosed.

    As Ogur asked in his article, how can one be afraid of writing such
    a polite report in a country where the mainstream media can suggest
    spitting on Erdogan's grave and put Turkey in the same category as
    North Korea?

    How can we say that an analyst who gave Turkey the same points as
    Egypt, which had a coup in 2013, is objective? How can that so-called
    neutral, objective journalist claim that journalists who had been
    released are still in prison? Karlekar responded saying that the
    journalists in question were released at the beginning of 2014,
    after the report was written.

    The Freedom House report cited the number of detained journalists prior
    to Dec. 1, 2013. But strangely, the report then talks of journalists
    who were fired from their jobs after Dec. 17.

    Why do we say the Freedom House report is unjust? According to liberal
    Turkish intellectual Ali Bayramoglu, the Freedom House report is a
    product of the same distortion as that which produced the negative
    views of Turkey in the United States. This perspective is actually
    tied to the AKP's Arab and Israeli policies, but distorted to appear
    to emanate from anti-Westernism and a lack of press freedom.

    There are many problems in the Turkish media, but to categorize Turkey
    alongside North Korea as a non-free country is not a just approach.

    Freedom House's report on Turkey's media was neither objective nor
    impartial.

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/05/freedom-house-turkey-report-misguided.html




    From: A. Papazian
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