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Turkey: Assaults on freedom of expression continue

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  • Turkey: Assaults on freedom of expression continue

    World Socialist Web Site, MI
    Dec 7 2007


    Turkey: Assaults on freedom of expression continue

    By Sinan Ikinci
    7 December 2007


    Ragip Zarakolu, owner of the Belge Publishing House and chairman of
    the Committee for Publishing Freedom, is facing up to three years in
    prison for publishing a book by a British-Armenian author, George
    Jerjian, entitled The Truth Will Set Us Free. The book deals with the
    mass deportations of Armenians in 1915 and chronicles the life of
    Jerjian's Armenian grandmother who survived the genocide with the
    help of an Ottoman soldier.

    The court case against publisher Zarakolu was opened last year in
    April and he is being charged under the notorious Article 301. Dozens
    of writers, journalists, artists, academics, publishers, translators
    and others have been tried under Article 301 and court cases against
    well-known authors such as the Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and
    Elif Safak and journalist Hrant Dink attracted considerable media
    interest in Turkey and internationally. However, non-celebrity
    victims' court cases have generally gone unnoticed.

    In the latest 301 case the prosecutor claims that Jerjian's book
    `insults' the memory of Turkey's founder Kemal Ataturk by portraying
    his close advisors as the people responsible for the mass deportation
    of Armenians.

    At a court hearing on October 3 a letter written by author Jerjian
    was presented to the court. It has been reported Jerjian initially
    considered coming to Turkey to attend the hearing, but then changed
    his mind due to the high risk of being attacked.

    This risk is not imagined. In many other Article 301-related cases
    fascist groups, generally accompanied by Maoist-Kemalist members of
    the misnamed Workers Party, have organised demonstrations denouncing
    the accused as traitors, spies and `missionary children.' They harass
    defendants and their legal representatives in and outside the court
    buildings and have physically attacked them.

    In addition there are growing indications that the Turkish police are
    directly involved in the persecution of dissidents and
    oppositionists. Clues have emerged linking the police directly to the
    murder of prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, a victim
    of a 301 case who was shot dead outside his bilingual newspaper's
    Istanbul office this year by a fascist assassin. There are also
    allegations implicating the police in the bloody killings of three
    Christian missionaries in Malatya.

    Zarakolu and his late wife Ayse Zarakolu, who died in 2002, as well
    as authors, editors and translators working for his publishing house,
    have faced frequent legal harassment for publishing books on minority
    and human rights in Turkey.

    In a climate of nationalism and chauvinism spearheaded by the Turkish
    military and fuelled by the bourgeois parties (both right-wing and
    the nominally `left-wing') and the news media, state prosecutor
    offices and police departments, which are dominated by fascistic and
    Islamist elements, continue to level charges against writers,
    journalists, artists, academics and publishers with dissident views.

    Recently a prosecutor launched an investigation targeting a book
    written by British writer Richard Dawkins, an expert in evolutionary
    biology, entitled The God Delusion. The aim of the investigation is
    to establish whether the book incites religious hatred. The inquiry
    was initiated following a complaint that the book defamed `sacred
    values.' This investigation is a good example of the utterly
    hypocritical attitude of the ruling Islamists with regard to freedom
    of expression.

    The Islamist AKP (Justice and Development Party) government has also
    been conducting a virtual war to expel evolution theory from Turkish
    schools. There is growing pressure on teachers to teach creationism
    alongside the theory of evolution and some teachers don't teach
    evolution at all.

    Just two months ago, the Kurdish nationalist Gundem newspaper was
    closed for a month for publishing two articles authored by the
    outlawed PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party) leader Murat Karayilan. Under
    the Anti-Terrorism Law the daily was accused of spreading PKK
    propaganda. This was the forth closure of the paper this year.

    A recent study on media freedom across Europen entitled `Goodbye to
    Freedom?' published by the Association of European Journalists (AEJ),
    gave some idea of the extent of the campaign against basic rights in
    Turkey. The report concludes: `In 2006 a total of 293 people faced
    legal action based on the country's illiberal laws on free
    expression. In some cases the army itself has brought prosecutions
    against journalists who investigated or criticized the military's
    involvement in politics.'

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/dec2 007/turk-d07.shtml
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