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  • Leading author acquitted, but Turkey remains a country where writers

    Vail Daily News, CO
    Sept 23 2006

    Leading author acquitted, but Turkey remains a country where writers
    can be put on trial

    A nationalist demonstrator gestures at a poster of author Elif Shafak
    during a protest outsi of a courthouse in Istanbul, Turkey, Thursday.

    Benjamin Harvey
    September 22, 2006



    ISTANBUL, Turkey - One of Turkey's leading authors was acquitted
    Thursday of "insulting Turkishness" - a crime Western-looking Turks
    view as an embarrassment and one of the biggest obstacles to joining
    the European Union.

    The speedy court decision was seen as a step toward securing greater
    freedom of speech, but critics said until the law is abolished,
    Turkey will remain a place where authors are regularly put on trial.

    "The fact remains that (Turkey's courts) established a restrictive
    interpretation of article 301 of the penal code which is not in line
    with the European Court of Human Rights and European standards of
    freedom of expression," EU spokeswoman Krisztina Nagy warned after
    the decision.

    But the government is reluctant to change the law - which makes it a
    crime to insult Turkey, "Turkishness" or the government - because it
    has broad nationalist support.

    EU officials counter the real damage to Turkey's image comes from
    putting writers like Elif Shafak on trial - a case brought by
    nationalist lawyers because of words spoken by the novelist's
    fictional characters.

    The court ruled to acquit about an hour-and-a-half into the trial on
    the grounds there was "no evidence" Shafak had insulted Turkishness.

    "I hope that the absurdity of this case - we're talking about
    fictional characters - will encourage people that it's time to act,"
    said Joost Lagendijk, a senior European Parliament member who
    attended the trial and is a vocal supporter of Turkey's EU bid.

    Lagendijk called on Turkey's pro-EU Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, who has himself spent time in jail for reciting an Islamist
    poem in 1999, to intervene and change the law.

    "Each court case that is started is a victory for those who don't
    want Turkey in the EU, and a defeat for me and those in the EU who
    are in favor of Turkey's accession," Lagendijk said.

    But nationalist lawyers said they will continue to bring legal action
    against anyone who insults Turkey and vowed to appeal the Shafak
    decision.

    Fiercely opposed to Turkey joining the EU and hostile to any foreign
    intervention, the lawyers spent most of the trial trying to eject
    non-Turkish observers - especially Lagendijk - from the packed
    Istanbul courtroom.

    "This is not a consulate court!" one of them yelled minutes after the
    case began.

    "Let the foreigners go to hell! They can supervise their own
    country!" bellowed lawyer Fuat Turgut as he pushed his way through a
    crowd in the doorway.

    The lawyers were repeatedly rebuffed and they eventually left the
    courtroom in protest, after which the judge moved quickly to acquit
    Shafak.

    "The court concluded in a 1 1/2-hour session that there was
    insufficient evidence to suggest that she committed a crime," Judge
    Irfan Adil Uncu said.

    Erdogan said he was pleased with the acquittal and said Turkey was
    open to discussing article 301. But in implicit support of the intent
    behind the law, he added: "Criticism is one thing, insulting is
    another."

    Justice Minister Cemil Cicek made similar remarks this week, asking a
    journalist for the Turkish Daily News whether he was willing to "let
    people curse at Turkey, insult Turkishness and get away with it."

    Erdogan regularly files lawsuits over alleged personal insults, and
    on Wednesday was awarded $3,400 in a case against a journalist who
    suggested the prime minister might be mentally ill.

    Shafak, 35, gave birth on Saturday and was at a hospital in Istanbul
    and did not attend Thursday's trial. If convicted, she could have
    received a maximum three-year prison sentence.

    Shafak's husband Eyup Can, editor-in-chief of the Turkish newspaper
    Referans, said he hoped the decision would be a model for future
    cases, and pushed for the abolition of article 301.

    "For the judge to make this decision in the first hearing is an
    important step," Can said as he was congratulated by friends after
    the trial. "But the most painful thing is that Turkey has become
    famous as a country that tries writers."

    In a sign public opinion may be turning in favor of change,
    nationalist protesters outside the courtroom - usually a rowdy, often
    violent group - were shouted down by other spectators.

    Shafak's book, "The Bastard of Istanbul," was released in Turkey on
    March 8 and has sold more than 50,000 copies. The court case was
    brought for words spoken by fictional Armenian characters regarding
    one of the most disputed episodes of Turkey's history, the mass
    killings of Armenians during the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    A Turkish court dropped charges last year against Orhan Pamuk,
    another leading novelist who also faced trial for writing about the
    killings of Armenians. The charges were dropped for technical reasons
    amid intense international pressure.

    However, a high court recently confirmed a six-month prison sentence
    imposed on Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for attempting to
    influence the judiciary after his newspaper ran articles criticizing
    the law.

    Dink's sentence was suspended, meaning he will not go to jail unless
    he repeats the same offense.
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