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ANKARA: Gov't ready to take steps to amend Article 301

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  • ANKARA: Gov't ready to take steps to amend Article 301

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 26 2007


    Gov't ready to take steps to amend Article 301


    Within two weeks the Turkish government will assess an amendment on a
    controversial law that has been widely considered as a stumbling
    block for freedom of expression in Turkey, Justice Minister Mehmet
    Ali Þahin said Tuesday.

    Þahin told reporters that his ministry will hand the draft amendment
    to Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which makes it a
    crime to "insult Turkishness," to the cabinet within 15 days.

    Turkey has been under heavy pressure from the EU to amend or scrap
    Article 301, which has been used to prosecute Turkish writers and
    intellectuals, notably for comments on the killings of Anatolian
    Armenians in 1915 under the Ottoman Empire. Last month, the EU's
    executive commission criticized Turkey for not carrying out any
    substantial reforms in the past two years and urged the government,
    which was given a strong mandate when it was re-elected to power, to
    reinvigorate the stalled reform process.

    The most important element in the draft amendment is that it requires
    prosecutors to secure permission from the Justice Ministry to launch
    court trials against the expression of opinions, Þahin said. This
    change is expected to lead to a decrease in the number of cases
    opened under Article 301. The term "Turkishness" in the article is
    expected to be changed to "the Turkish Republic," while the
    expression "insulting Turkishness" is expected to be replaced by
    "insulting the Turkish nation."

    Discussions on the amendment are being carried out both by lawyers
    from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and the
    Justice Ministry, Þahin noted.

    The government has so far refused to heed EU demands to amend the
    article without delay, saying the issue will be taken up as part of
    its broader drive to reform the current Constitution, which was
    drafted under military rule in 1982.

    Releasing its annual progress report in November, the European
    Commission called on Ankara to make "significant further efforts"
    toward improving freedom of expression and religion, stressing that
    more people were prosecuted under Article 301 last year than in 2005.
    It particularly urged steps to repeal or amend Article 301, saying
    accession talks will not be opened on at least one of 35 negotiation
    chapters if the law is not amended or repealed.

    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. Claiming that the killings
    of Anatolian Armenians amounted to genocide is a criminal offense in
    Turkey under Article 301. 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 that it is a burden on the media and NGOs in Turkey.

    Prominent Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink, who was shot dead in
    Ýstanbul in January by an ultranationalist youth, had also been
    handed a suspended jail sentence under Article 301 for his comments
    on the Armenian issue. Tens of thousands of people marched through
    Ýstanbul at his funeral to protest against ultranationalist violence.
    As the first anniversary of Dink's assassination on Jan. 19
    approaches, it is not yet clear when the cabinet will approve the
    amendment on Article 301. Earlier this month veteran publisher Ragýp
    Zarakolu, who could receive a jail sentence of up to three years for
    insulting national identity, described Article 301 as "very
    dangerous."

    "If writers and journalists are depicted as traitors or enemies of
    Turkey, it becomes difficult to be in front of Turkish public
    opinion. It opens the door to being lynched or killed by
    ultranationalist gangs," Zarakolu said, citing the example of Dink.



    26.12.2007

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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