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Turkish Scholar Challenges Penal Code

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  • Turkish Scholar Challenges Penal Code

    The Chronicle of Higher Education
    August 10, 2007 Friday
    INTERNATIONAL; Pg. 26 Vol. 53 No. 49



    Turkish Scholar Challenges Penal Code

    AISHA LABI


    A scholar at the University of Minnesota's Center for Holocaust &
    Genocide Studies has filed a case with the European Court of Human
    Rights that he says is the first attempt to overturn through that
    legal channel a controversial provision of Turkey's penal code that
    criminalizes "denigrating Turkishness."

    Taner Akçam, a Turkish sociologist and historian, has faced
    retribution in his home country for his academic work about the
    killing of as many as 1.5 million Armenians during the waning days of
    the Ottoman Empire, which modern Turkish governments have refused to
    characterize as genocide.

    Mr. Akçam has been outspoken in his willingness to do so, in, for
    example, his most recent book, A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide
    and the Question of Turkish Responsibility, which was published last
    year. He has come under attack as a result.

    He was charged under Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which has
    been used frequently against journalists, academics, and writers, and
    which Amnesty International says "poses a direct threat to the
    fundamental right to freedom of expression."

    Hrant Dink, a journalist of Armenian origin who was also charged
    under Article 301, was killed by nationalist extremists this year.
    Elif Shafak, an assistant professor of Turkish and women's studies at
    the University of Arizona, was acquitted last year of Article 301
    charges stemming from her latest novel.
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