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ANKARA: Freedom House Sees Improvements In Press Freedom

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  • ANKARA: Freedom House Sees Improvements In Press Freedom

    FREEDOM HOUSE SEES IMPROVEMENTS IN PRESS FREEDOM

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 4 2007

    There has been impressive progress in Turkey's freedom of the press in
    the past decade despite lingering concerns, a Freedom House official
    has said.

    Paula Schriefer, speaking at a session on press freedom at the US
    Congress, also said the biggest obstacle for freedom of the press is
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which has been used in the
    prosecution of a number of intellectuals and activists since its
    enactment in June 2005.

    Freedom House, a Washington-based organization advocating expansion
    of freedoms, describes Turkey as "partly free" in the 2007 edition
    of its annual survey, "Freedom in the World." Turkey received a three
    (on a scale of one to seven, with seven as the lowest) for political
    rights and a three for civil liberties.

    Schriefer told the hearing -- hosted by the US Commission on Security
    and Cooperation in Europe, known as the Helsinki Commission - that
    Turkey had received a score of 49 in a global Freedom House index of
    press freedoms, up from 74 in 1996 and 58 in 2000. Countries with the
    lowest scores (0-30) are ranked as "free" in the Freedom House report.

    In its 2007 freedom of the press report, Freedom House says
    constitutional provisions for freedom of the press and of expression
    are only partially upheld in practice. It complains that Article 301's
    restrictive measures have increasingly undermined press freedom in
    Turkey, noting that some 72 individuals were tried in 2006 under the
    infamous code for "insulting Turkishness."

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, slain by a nationalist
    gunman in January, had been prosecuted twice under Article 301 for
    his comments on the issue of an alleged Armenian genocide. On the
    other hand, similar charges brought against Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel
    Prize-winning Turkish novelist, were dropped in January 2006 when the
    Justice Ministry denied prosecution of the case because the new penal
    code was not yet in effect at the time Pamuk made the statements for
    which he was charged.

    The report also notes Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan's defamation
    suits against members of the media. Erdoðan filed 59 cases in 2006,
    according to the report. It also expressed concern over amendments
    to the anti-terror law, approved in June, that allow for imprisoning
    journalists up to three years for the dissemination of statements
    and propaganda by terrorist organizations. "The new legislation
    raises concerns that the broad definition of terrorism could allow
    for arbitrary prosecutions," it says.

    --Boundary_(ID_5xZvNCbrL+U7VR3U7HzChg)--
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