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Turkish Publisher Faces Jail Over Armenia Book

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  • Turkish Publisher Faces Jail Over Armenia Book

    TURKISH PUBLISHER FACES JAIL OVER ARMENIA BOOK
    By Gareth Jones, Reuters

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 4 2007

    A Turkish publisher could receive a jail sentence on Wednesday of up
    to three years for insulting national identity under a law the European
    Union says unfairly restricts freedom of speech and wants scrapped.

    "Tomorrow's hearing may bring a final verdict in my trial, which
    began in 2005. The prosecutor wants the maximum penalty," publisher
    Ragip Zarakolu told Reuters on Tuesday.

    Prosecutors accuse Zarakolu of insulting "Turkishness" under
    article 301 of Turkey's penal code for publishing a Turkish language
    translation of a book by London-based author George Jerjian called "The
    Truth Will Set Us Free". The book urges reconciliation between Turks
    and Armenians and covers the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks during World War One, a highly sensitive issue for Turkey.

    Armenia, backed by many Western historians, says as many as 1.5 million
    of its people suffered systematic genocide at Turkish hands at that
    time. Turkey denies there was genocide and says many Muslim Turks as
    well as Christian Armenians were killed in inter-ethnic conflict as
    the Ottoman Empire collapsed under pressure of war.

    Affirming that the killings amounted to genocide is a criminal offence
    in Turkey. Nobel Literature Laureate Orhan Pamuk is among writers
    prosecuted for his comments on the events of 1915-16, though he was
    acquitted on a legal technicality.

    "I am against all forms of restriction on free expression... I did
    not even write this book, but Turkish people have a right to know
    what Armenians think," said Zarakolu, head of the Belge International
    Publishers.

    Zarakolu said he would appeal against any conviction. He has often
    been a target of Turkish prosecutors over the decades for his stance
    on freedom of expression and for publishing books the authorities
    have disapproved of.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's conservative government, under heavy
    EU pressure, is mulling ways of amending article 301, though analysts
    say the real problem lies not in the text but in the conservative
    mindset of many judges and prosecutors.

    "The government could have changed the law already. It is a very
    dangerous article. If accusations depict writers and journalists as
    traitors or enemies of Turkey, it is not so simple to be in front
    of Turkish public opinion," said Zarakolu. "It opens the door to
    our being lynched or killed by ultra-nationalist gangs," he said,
    citing the example of prominent Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink
    who was shot dead in Istanbul in January by an ultra-nationalist youth.

    Dink had been handed a suspended jail sentence under article 301 for
    his comments on the Armenian issue. Tens of thousands of people marched
    through Istanbul at his funeral to protest against ultra-nationalist
    violence.

    Members of the European Parliament visiting Turkey this week said
    article 301 was harming Turkey's bid to join the EU. "This latest case
    underlines that the Turkish government's promise to reform article
    301 cannot come too soon," Richard Howitt, a British Labor MEP,
    said in a statement.

    "Authors expressing peaceful views should never lead to imprisonment.

    The Turkish government has understood this and it is now for the
    Turkish parliament to pass, and for the Turkish courts to respect,"
    he said.
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