Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey prepares to amend free speech law

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

  • Turkey prepares to amend free speech law

    Reuters, UK
    Dec 26 2007


    Turkey prepares to amend free speech law


    None hurt as Turkey bombs Northern Iraq
    ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey is preparing to amend a controversial law
    on freedom of speech that has been criticised repeatedly by the
    European Union and could slow EU accession talks with Brussels.

    The justice ministry will hand the draft amendment to article 301 of
    the penal code, which makes it an offence to "insult Turkishness", to
    the cabinet within 15 days, Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin told
    reporters on Tuesday.

    It was not clear when the cabinet would approve the amendment.

    Article 301 has been used to prosecute Turkish writers and thinkers,
    notably for comments on the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 under
    the Ottoman Empire.

    Two years ago the government tried Nobel literature laureate Orhan
    Pamuk under article 301 for his remarks on the events of 1915-16, but
    he was acquitted on a legal technicality.

    The European Commission's annual progress report on Turkey, published
    in November, called on Ankara to make "significant further efforts"
    on freedom of expression and religion, and noted that more people had
    been prosecuted under article 301 last year than in 2005.

    Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn has recommended that the EU not
    extend accession talks to the key areas of justice and human rights
    until the article is changed.

    Critics say Turkey's centre-right government is dragging its feet,
    fearing that amending the law could spark a nationalist backlash at a
    time when EU membership is becoming less popular among Turks.

    EU officials said the law was poisoning Turkey's relations with
    Armenia and weighing on the media and non-government organisations in
    Turkey.

    Ankara began EU accession negotiations in 2005 but the EU suspended
    talks last December on eight of the 35 chapters or policy areas into
    which EU law is divided after Ankara refused to open its ports and
    airports to traffic from Cyprus.

    (Reporting by Hidir Goktas, writing by Paul de Bendern, editing by
    Tim Pearce)
Working...
X