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  • Turkish Police Clamp Strict Security on Christians' Trial

    Journal Chrétien, France
    Jan 31 2007

    Turkish Police Clamp Strict Security on Christians' Trial

    Measures follow murder of Armenian journalist ; defense lawyer smells
    conspiracy plot.

    by Barbara G. Baker

    ISTANBUL, January 31 - Strict security controls surrounded the second
    court hearing for two Turkish Christians facing criminal charges for
    insulting Turkish identity under the nation's controversial Article
    301.

    Police had thrown cordons around the Silivri courthouse and main
    streets into the town hours before Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal
    arrived from Istanbul with their lawyer for the 2 p.m. trial on
    Monday (January 29).

    Heightened police protection for the two Christians and their lawyer
    was attributed to the shocking assassination 10 days earlier of
    another Turkish Christian, prominent Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
    murdered in Istanbul by a teenage nationalist.

    Editor of the weekly Agos newspaper, Dink had drawn the wrath of
    Turkish nationalists after his trial and conviction last year under
    Article 301, the same restrictive law against freedom of speech under
    which Tastan and Topal are charged.

    Uniformed police officers met the defendants' car as it approached
    the center of Silivri, a town 45 miles west of Istanbul . Authorities
    were already questioning and thoroughly searching everyone entering
    the courthouse, refusing admittance to onlookers or members of the
    press.

    Meanwhile, small groups of young men could be seen idling around the
    streets adjoining the court building, eyeing the entrance and all
    passersby.

    But police spirited the defendants in and out of the back door of the
    courthouse, preventing tensions like those aroused by nationalist
    demonstrators at the first hearing in November. In doing so, they
    also frustrated a mob of journalists and photographers lying in wait
    for the court participants at the front steps of the courthouse.

    As soon as the hearing concluded, the Christians and their lawyer
    were immediately escorted out of town. When onlookers spotted them
    leaving the courthouse grounds, one police officer climbed in their
    car until they left the city limits under police car escort and
    approached the main highway.

    `Of course, they provided us with very serious protection,' defense
    lawyer Haydar Polat told Compass afterwards. `But at the same time
    this created a lot of apprehension for my clients, with police
    climbing into our car, taking photographs of our license plate, etc.'

    The two Christians, who are both converts from Islam, are also
    accused under less-known penal statutes of reviling Islam (Article
    216) and secretly compiling private data on Turkish citizens for a
    Bible correspondence course (Article 135).

    At their January 29 hearing, the presiding judge again closed his
    court to all observers, with only the defendants and their lawyer
    present for the defense. They faced seven prosecuting lawyers led by
    ultranationalist attorney Kemal Kerincsiz, notorious in Turkey for
    having hounded the outspoken Dink with multiple charges under Article
    301.

    Contradictory Testimony

    Fatih Kose, 23, the only adult among the three accusers, took the
    witness stand for the first time in the case. In his testimony, Kose
    reportedly admitted that he had visited Tastan's church in Istanbul
    several times of his own free will.

    While reiterating his written accusations, Kose contradicted himself
    several times as to where and when he had heard specific `illegal'
    statements, and from which of the two defendants. `His testimony was
    very contradictory,' Polat said, `and this kept angering the judge,
    who really chewed him out over many of his statements.'

    When Polat asked the court whether Kose was a member of any known
    political group in Silivri, Kerincsiz reportedly shook his fists at
    Polat, objecting so vehemently to the question that the judge ordered
    him to stop `making a show.'

    Kerincsiz further embarrassed himself when the judge demanded to know
    why he had not produced the two teenager accusers in court. The
    lawyer's explanation that the two boys had not gotten permission to
    be absent from school that day fell flat with the judge, who dryly
    reminded Kerincsiz that all the nation's schools had closed three
    days earlier for their annual winter recess.

    A 16-minute video submitted by the prosecution at the first hearing
    as evidence against the defendants proved to have been filmed at a
    distance, with no sound track of anyone's voices to corroborate the
    accusers' claims. Tastan and Topal had been filmed secretly while
    conversing in a tea garden in Silivri with several youths.

    The prosecution then submitted another video, said to have been
    filmed secretly in Tastan's church during a communion service, to be
    examined before the next hearing for alleged insults against
    Turkishness or Islam uttered by the defendants.

    `This was exactly a plot, a conspiracy,' lawyer Polat said, after
    hearing Kose's testimony in court. `The youths asked for Bibles, for
    brochures, they go of their own accord to church - and then they come
    and complain !'

    Setting the next hearing for April 18, the judge ordered police
    escorts to ensure that all three complainants were brought, `by force
    if necessary,' to testify. The underage plaintiffs have been
    identified by their first names as Alper, 16, and Oguz, 17.

    Gendarme Ordered to Testify

    The judge also issued a summons for an official witness to testify
    from the regional gendarme headquarters, which initiated a raid last
    October on Tastan's home and the defendants' Istanbul office,
    allegedly searching for weapons.

    In addition, the court requested a copy of news footage aired on
    Turkey 's ATV channel on November 20 and 21. Kose was interviewed in
    the broadcast, denouncing Tastan and Topal for `working to
    Christianize Turkish Muslims en masse.'

    In his statements at Monday's hearing, Kerincsiz reportedly accused
    Tastan's church of breaking the law by collecting offerings and
    tithes from the congregation. The attorney insisted that Turkish law
    required all domestic institutions to obtain permission from their
    local civil authorities to collect funds.

    `Every mosque in Turkey has an offering box for the donations of the
    faithful,' Topal commented to Compass. `So don't we Christian
    citizens have that same right ?'

    When Kerincsiz exited the courthouse front entrance after the
    55-minute hearing, he refused to speak with either Compass or the
    Turkish media, simply repeating the date of the next hearing, April
    18.

    In the wake of considerable international media on the case, the
    European Commission and various officials within the European
    Parliament have sent inquiries to the Turkish Ministry of Justice and
    other government bodies, requesting judicial developments on the
    charges against the two Christians.

    Ever since the case was filed against them, Tastan told Compass
    yesterday, he has been made aware that his e-mails, telephone calls,
    home and even movements in the area have been under constant
    surveillance.

    `The day after I visit anyone, whether it's a relative or some
    acquaintance in another town, the secret police come around and
    question them about my visit,' Tastan said. `Am I considered a
    terrorist, that I warrant such attention ?'

    `We don't know what the results of this trial will be,' Tastan said.
    `But God knows. And I think that the judge understood on Monday that
    the people accusing us are not telling the truth.'

    http://www.spcm.org/Journal/spip.php?arti cle6165
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