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  • ISTANBUL: Defending freedom of the individual and freedom of the pre

    Sunday's Zaman, Turkey
    May 16 2010

    Defending freedom of the individual and freedom of the press

    ANDREW FINKEL [email protected] Columnists


    ErtuÄ?rul Ã-zkök, the former editor-in-chief and now columnist of the
    Hürriyet newspaper, has called me personally to account in what is on
    the surface a peculiar piece. He likens the DoÄ?an organization he
    works for to the far-right, Holocaust-denying, anti-immigrant,
    anti-gay, anti-everything party in France, the National Front. And he
    seems to take pride in comparing his own employer to the
    ultra-conservative head of that party, Jean-Marie Le Pen. At least
    that is the curlicue logic of his argument, and far be it from me to
    rescue him from his own eloquence.
    It all has to do with Al Capone.

    But let's step back many months to when the brouhaha all started. I
    was commenting in this column on an editorial in The New York Times
    which accused the Turkish government of unbecoming conduct. The paper
    rushed to the side of the DoÄ?an Media Group and said that the outsize
    tax bill which its parent company faced was a clear attempt to
    interfere with press freedom. I certainly did not argue with the
    assumption that the fine was politically motivated. However, I said
    that the DoÄ?an group would be far more worthy of sympathy if it used
    the power of its media more responsibly and if it had not been so
    cavalier about other people's rights of expression.

    You don't have to look very far to find a telephone directory's worth
    of examples. I myself interviewed Aydın DoÄ?an for Time magazine (with
    Ã-zkök in the room) when he said he felt no obligation to oppose a law
    proposed by the then-Ecevit government. That law, vetoed by the
    president, was a devil's pact which allowed the government more
    control over the press and Internet but allowed the DoÄ?an group to
    control a greater share of broadcast media. That the DoÄ?an group has
    used their media might to enjoy a non-media commercial advantage is
    not something even Mr. Ã-zkök disputes. When an (illegal) wiretap
    revealed the Hürriyet editor demanding a large incentive package for a
    cardboard box factory, Mr. Ã-zkök asked what the fuss was all about. He
    wore two hats, one as editor-in-chief, the other as officer of a DoÄ?an
    company.

    When I asked Mr. DoÄ?an about the frequent accusations that his
    newspaper seemed to make their front pages available to a `deep
    state,' he seemed to shrug his shoulders, which I interpreted at the
    time to suggest that even he couldn't entirely control what was
    printed. Emre Uslu, a columnist for this newspaper, recently recalled
    an incident in which not Hürriyet but the DoÄ?an-owned Milliyet helped
    scupper reconciliation talks between Ankara and the Iraqi Kurdish
    administration in 2004. It did so by reporting over three days an
    entirely bogus story which cited a (fictional) meeting in the State
    Department where how the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
    would almost certainly quiescence if the Kurds in Iraq annexed the
    city of Kirkuk was purportedly discussed. Even more alarming, Milliyet
    had a readers' representative at the time who came to the conclusion
    that his paper had been manipulated. When he tried to print even a
    limited retraction, he was immediately dismissed from his job. I don't
    think anyone can hold Hürriyet responsible for pulling the trigger
    that killed Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink or issuing death
    threats against Orhan Pamuk. However, I would not describe as
    `responsible' the reporting which led to both men going on trial and
    which resulted in such an atmosphere of hate.

    Going back a decade

    To set the record straight, I have to report my own family's battle
    with Hürriyet, which occurred over a decade ago. My wife was mortified
    when she opened the paper one day to read the entirely fabricated
    story that she had been apprehended stealing from state archives. She
    is a respected Ottoman historian and if that libel had been allowed to
    stand unchallenged, it would have ruined her career. I can only
    speculate on Hürriyet's motives for running such a piece. It followed
    hard on the heels of attacks against my own reporting for CNN on
    Abdullah Ã-calan's flight to Italy. My wife wrote to the CEO of
    Hürriyet asking `woman to woman' for some understanding of the
    circumstances which her paper had put her and to request an apology
    that would set the record straight. Instead she received a very long
    letter from Hürriyet's chief columnist Oktay EkÅ?i accusing her of
    behaving with the imperial arrogance of the British occupiers of
    Ä°stanbul. That Mr. EkÅ?i is the chairman of the Turkish Press Council
    was snide insult to a very real sense of injury. In the end she
    cleared her name in front of a Turkish judge, who awarded her modest
    civil damages.

    All this explains my inability, hard as I try, to shed even crocodile
    tears for the dilemma in which the DoÄ?an group now finds itself. As I
    wrote last September:

    `I concur with the Times that it is wrong for the Turkish government
    to enlist the tax authorities to wage political battles. And I feel
    concern for the future of some excellent colleagues in the DoÄ?an media
    outlets who are loyal to the integrity of their profession and whose
    only interest is finding enough space to do their jobs properly. But I
    share the widely held distaste for a newspaper group that has
    pioneered a style of journalism that has been damaging to Turkish
    democracy and which is more concerned about narrow interest than free
    discourse.'

    A small observation

    At that point, I recalled how the US federal prosecutors tried Al
    Capone on charges of tax evasion when they couldn't make a case for
    racketeering. It is an observation that might still be wandering
    around cyber space unattended, had it not been for the fact that the
    prime minister made a very similar observation a few days later in an
    interview with the Wall Street Journal. I have, in this column,
    criticized the prime minister's intemperate use of language -- and I
    suppose that criticism holds true even when he appears to be
    paraphrasing words I have used myself. I am certainly not going to try
    to read the prime minister's mind nor interpret what he meant. I can
    only explain myself, which is what Ã-zkök in his recent column has
    asked me to do.

    He does so in a very peculiar context.

    Mr. Ã-zkök cites another DoÄ?an columnist and jurist, Rıza Türmen, who
    has also leapt to his employer's defense. Both refer to a 2007
    European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) refusal to overturn a ruling of
    a French court. The case concerned a novel called `Le Procès de
    Jean-Marie Le Pen.' The plot was inspired by the actual murders
    committed by National Front militants against two men of North African
    descent and held Le Pen ultimately accountable for those crimes. A
    vote for the National Front was no better than a vote for Al Capone.
    Le Pen successfully sued both the author and (a point Mr. Ã-zkök gets
    wrong) the publisher of Libération newspaper, which had reprinted the
    offending passages to protest the lower court's ruling.

    Mr. Ã-zkök evokes the authority of the ECtHR to denounce the Turkish
    prime minister and the commentator who put words in his mouth. `To use
    the term `Al Capone' even against a politician accused of racism has
    been ruled defamatory by the ECtHR. ¦ So much for Western standards of
    journalism,' he writes. Where, he adds, do I stand now?

    Well, for a start, if you read Mr. Ã-zkök's article, you would think
    that the ECtHR regards any comparison of anything or anyone to Capone
    to be a violation of individual liberties. But that's just bananas.
    Take a look at the Strasbourg court's ruling. For a start, the court
    ruled on four passages from the book deemed defamatory (and I quote):

    1. that Mr. Le Pen led `a gang of killers' and that those `people [who
    voted for him] would have voted for Al Capone too'

    2. that the Front National used violence against anyone who left the party

    3. that behind each of Mr. Le Pen's assertions `loomed the spectre of
    the worst abominations of the history of mankind'

    4. that he was a `vampire' who thrived on the `bitterness of his
    electorate, but sometimes also on their blood, like the blood of his
    enemies' and that he was a liar who used defamation against his
    opponents to deflect accusations away from himself.

    This is very different matter from pointing out the irony that both a
    Turkish newspaper proprietor and Al Capone faced cases for income tax
    evasion. In fact, it is chalk and cheese.

    It is worth noting that some judges absented themselves from the
    Strasbourg verdict, which maintained that since the book was a work of
    fiction, the author was entitled to exercise artistic expression. But
    let's take the matter one step further. You are a newspaper man in a
    country which has a poor record of defending freedoms of the press.
    You live in a country where a Noble Prize-winning novelist has been
    put on trial and where another novelist has been tried for sentiments
    expressed by a character in her novel. You live in a country whose
    citizens face discrimination from the European far right because of
    their religion and the color of their passport. You live in a country
    where there have been frequent prosecutions of writers of books and
    newspapers. One of the methods of defending the freedom of publication
    has been for those concerned to put their names down as publishers of
    anthologies of `banned' articles in the hopes of swamping the courts
    and making it impossible for them to pursue violations of freedom of
    speech. Where do your responsibilities and your instincts lie?

    Would you defend a novelist who attacked (in however unseemly and
    hyperbolic fashion) a racist and crypto-fascistic party and show some
    solidarity with a fellow newspaper which stood up for his right to
    speak? Perhaps not, if you were truly concerned about the equality of
    every individual before the law. Or would you rejoice that the courts
    had managed to silence an over-excited critic? I don't blame Mr. Ã-zkök
    for standing by his proprietor nor for feeling angry that the tax
    authorities have been unjust. But he does so as an executive defending
    his company, not as a committed journalist desperate about the truth.


    16.05.2010
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