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Artist Will 'Party' With Turkish President Erdogan's Money

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  • Artist Will 'Party' With Turkish President Erdogan's Money

    ARTIST WILL 'PARTY' WITH TURKISH PRESIDENT ERDOGAN'S MONEY

    BGN News, Turkey
    March 5 2015

    The artist who will be paid TL 10,000 in compensation from President
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan is planning to spend the money on a March 21
    Nevruz holiday celebration with his friends. Sculptor Mehmet Aksoy
    filed suit and won against Erdogan when the president had called
    his sculpture, created to promote reconciliation between Turkey and
    Armenia, a "monstrosity."

    "I will invite my friends on March 21 for Nevruz -- a spring festival
    traditionally marked in the second half of March -- celebrations and
    will spend the money there. I will share it with them," said sculptor
    Mehmet Aksoy.

    Aksoy said the ruling showed that politicians could not speak in such
    a way without consequence, and that they should appreciate the arts
    and artists.

    "Artists and art must not be shoved around. We should protect our
    freedoms and the whole realm of freedom. This ruling has proven that,"
    he said, adding that he was happy justice had been served.

    "There are judges who still have sense of justice, that is to say
    there are judges of the Republic. Nobody can humiliate another just
    from arrogance," he added.

    On Tuesday, a court found Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    guilty of insulting renowned sculptor Mehmet Aksoy over an incident
    in 2011 when he called Aksoy's statue symbolizing goodwill between
    Turkey and Armenia a "monstrosity." The president was sentenced to
    pay TL 10,000 in damages to the sculptor.

    The comments by then-Prime Minister Erdogan came during a visit to
    the northeastern city of Kars. "They put a monstrosity there, next
    to the tomb of [scholar] Hasan Harakani," Erdogan had said during
    his January 2011 visit, "It is impossible to think that such a thing
    should exist next to a true work of art."

    Aksoy then sued Erdogan for "insulting" him. An Ä°stanbul court
    ruled on March 3 for Erdogan to pay TL 10,000 in moral indemnities
    to Aksoy, partially accepting the TL 100,000 case Aksoy had filed
    against Erdogan.

    While Aksoy's attorney defended their case by saying that labeling the
    sculpture a "monstrosity" was an insult to Aksoy, Erdogan's attorney
    claimed that it was not as an insult, but rather a critique.

    March 5, 2015 | DHA | Ä°stanbul

    http://national.bgnnews.com/artist-will-party-with-turkish-president-erdogans-money-haberi/4029

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