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ANKARA: Freedom of press faces obstacles despite improvement

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  • ANKARA: Freedom of press faces obstacles despite improvement

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Dec 6 2007


    Freedom of press in Turkey faces obstacles despite improvement
    Thursday, December 6, 2007


    ISTANBUL - Turksih Daily News


    Incidents of violence against journalists and legal harassment of
    the media in Turkey have dropped significantly since the 1990s, but a
    recent study has revealed that there are still obstacles to freedom
    of press.

    `Goodbye to Freedom?' is the survey on media freedom across
    Europe published by the Association of European Journalists (AEJ),
    covering 20 countries in eastern and western Europe. The survey
    highlights evidence that freedom of press in Europe is threatened by
    restrictive laws, hidden political and commercial agendas, threats of
    imprisonment, intimidation and in some cases, murder. The survey
    investigates the situation in 19 countries as well as the European
    Union. The Turkey section was written by Doðan Týlýç, AEJ's first
    vice president.

    `Despite the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government's
    promises that restrictive laws will be repealed or eased, the freedom
    of journalists to report fully and objectively on the nation's
    affairs is still seriously limited by legal and other obstacles,'
    according to the survey.

    The murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, editor of the
    weekly Armenian-language newspaper Agos last Jebruary outside his
    Istanbul office, and the attempt to prosecute the Nobel Literature
    Prize-winner Orhan Pamuk are given as examples to `the twin dangers
    of nationalist violence against liberal-minded writers and of
    criminal prosecution through Turkey's archaic laws banning insults
    against Turkish identity or state institutions.'

    `In 2006 a total of 293 people faced legal action based on the
    country's illiberal laws on free expression,' the survey revealed.
    `In some cases the army itself has brought prosecutions against
    journalists who investigated or criticized the military's involvement
    in politics. Turkey's criminal laws are out of line with its Council
    of Europe obligations and incompatible with press freedom.'

    The survey also criticizes attempts to censor Internet sites. `Some
    Turkish courts have in some cases responded to allegations of
    cyber-crime by banning access to whole Web sites, even when the
    complaint concerns only a small segment of the site in question,'
    according to the survey. It cites the example of the video-sharing
    site YouTube being temporarily blocked in Turkey last September by a
    court order over a video allegedly insulting Mustafa Kemal Atatürk,
    the founder of the modern Turkish Republic.

    `Despite the diversity and vigor evident in the media, Turkish
    journalists face an array of significant obstacles to media freedom
    and independence,' Týlýç wrote in the report. `Greater solidarity is
    needed among Turkish journalists, especially to organise strong
    professional and trade union bodies which can effectively push for
    better conditions and defend the media against undue political and
    commercial influences,' he added.

    The AEJ is an independent, self-funding association for journalists
    in Europe with more than 1000 individual members in over 20 national
    sections. It promotes professional contacts across Europe's borders,
    open debate on European issues, and the freedom and independence of
    media and journalists in Europe.
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