Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish publisher facing imprisonment under article 301

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish publisher facing imprisonment under article 301

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Turkish publisher facing imprisonment under article 301
    05.12.2007 16:58 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nearly two years after the internationally acclaimed
    author Orhan Pamuk narrowly escaped imprisonment for statements that
    were thought to "insult Turkishness", the publisher of a British
    writer goes on trial today accused of the same charge.

    Ragip Zarakolu is facing up to three years in prison for publishing a
    book - promoting reconciliation between Turks and Armenians - by
    George Jerjian, a writer living in London, The Guardian reports.

    Jerjian's book, The Truth Will Set Us Free, which was translated into
    Turkish in 2005, chronicles the life of his Armenian grandmother who
    survived the early 20th century massacres of Armenians thanks to an
    Ottoman soldier. The historical account has prompted as much
    controversy among the Armenian Diaspora, not least in the US, as it
    has in Turkey.

    "Mr Jerjian ... is a highly credible author with very moderate views,"
    said the Labour MEP Richard Howitt, who will attend the hearing at
    Istanbul's Asliye Ceze courthouse. "If even he falls foul of Turkish
    law it shows how far they still have to go on freedom of expression."

    The MEP, who is in Turkey in his role as vice-president of the human
    rights sub-committee of the European parliament, said Jerjian was too
    scared to visit Turkey "for fear he might be shot".

    Zarakolu is being tried under Turkey's 301 article of law, the same
    legislation that was used against Pamuk, a Nobel prize winner, as well
    as 60 other local writers and journalists. Today's hearing comes in
    the wake of repeated promises by senior officials in Turkey's
    reform-minded neo-Islamist administration to rescind the notorious
    piece of legislation.

    In February this year, six months before he went on to become head of
    state, Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, declared the need for
    article 301 to be revised, saying: "There are certain problems with
    [it]. We see there are changes which must be made to this law."

    Yesterday the Turkish justice minister, Mehmet Ali Sahin, reiterated
    the sentiment, telling Howitt that "freely expressed views that
    neither promote terrorism nor violence should be protected".

    But while Turkish diplomats admit the contentious law has probably
    done more damage to Ankara's efforts to join the EU than any other
    single piece of legislation, observers say there has been little
    headway made over reforming the spirit and letter of the law.

    In a climate of unabated nationalism, state prosecutors and police
    officials continue to level charges against artists, musicians and
    writers perceived to publicly denigrate Turkishness.

    Vehemently denied by Turkish authorities, the Armenian genocide, which
    began in 1915, has sparked feverish debate, with several writers,
    including the Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink, being sued
    for publicly questioning the official version of events. Dink,
    editor-in-chief of the bilingual paper Agos, was shot dead outside his
    Istanbul office this year by a self-avowed nationalist. Scholar Taner
    Akcam and novelist Elif Shafak were also prosecuted under the
    notorious article.

    "The government has understood that it needs to change the article but
    it is now for parliament to pass it and for the courts to respect that
    change," Howitt told the Guardian from Ankara.

    The neo-Islamists' unveiling of a new constitution later this month
    will be a significant turning point in the campaign to overturn the
    law, analysts say. "A test for the sincerity of their commitment will
    be that the new constitution lays down a framework where these cases
    never happen again," Howitt said.
Working...
X