Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Hrant Dink: Silenced in the Shadow of Turkey's Penal Code 301

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

  • Hrant Dink: Silenced in the Shadow of Turkey's Penal Code 301

    World Politics Watch
    Feb 2 2007

    Hrant Dink: Silenced in the Shadow of Turkey's Penal Code 301

    Handan T. Satiroglu | Bio | 02 Feb 2007
    World Politics Watch Exclusive


    Since shortly before the inception of the Turkish Republic, in 1923,
    a journalist has been murdered on average every 1.5 years in Turkey,
    columnist Oktay Eksi recently lamented in the Hurriyet newspaper. In
    the last 15 years alone, according to a recent report of the New
    York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, "18 Turkish journalists
    have been killed for their work, making it the deadliest country in
    the world for journalists." Like a blow from an axe, the murder of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink two weeks ago has cut yet
    another deep gash into Turkey's already embattled democratization and
    intellectual freedom.

    The assassination of Dink, editor-in-chief of the Istanbul-based
    Armenian newspaper Agos, reflects a hard fact masked by Turkey's
    recent democratic reforms during its EU bid: Turkey is in the throes
    of a profound identity conflict. On the one hand, its archaic,
    oppressive political machinery lies decadent and gasping under the
    weight of recent European-inspired reforms that have resulted in
    democratic changes. Yet, conversely, the reforms have been met with a
    fresh burst of nationalist backlash. The draconian Turkish Penal Code
    Article 301, making it a crime to insult "Turkishness," has further
    nourished Turkish extreme nationalism. Since the article was
    introduced in 2005 -- replacing an even more strident law -- more
    than 96 writers and intellectuals have been persecuted, including
    high-profile cases such as novelist Elif Shafak, slain leftist
    journalist Ahmet Taner, and the late Dink, who was prosecuted three
    times under 301 for addressing Turkish-Armenian issues squarely.



    In a case that resonated around the world, the article first exploded
    into the international limelight when it was invoked against the
    Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk for his comments made to a Swiss
    newspaper. "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians were
    murdered," he claimed in his infamous interview with Tages Anzeiger.
    "Hardly anyone dares mention it, so I do. And that's why I'm hated."
    With mounting pressure from the EU, the judge later dismissed the
    case over a legal technicality.

    But the defeat of the case of the Nobel Laureate is of little
    consolation for the countless individuals -- artists, writers,
    dissidents, lawyers and students -- who presently face charges for
    voicing views that can be construed as "an insult to the Turkish
    state or identity." Take the example of publisher Abdullah Yilmaz. He
    faces a possible jail sentence for issuing a Turkish edition of the
    best-selling novel "The Witches of Smyrna," authored by Greek writer
    Mara Meimaridi. The novel allegedly paints Turks in a negative light,
    and reportedly "describes parts of the Turkish quarter of Izmir as
    'dirty'." More recently, publishers of the Turkish translation of
    "Manufacturing Consent" by Noam Chomsky have been brought to trial on
    the grounds that that the editors and translators of the book openly
    denigrated Turkish identity, the Turkish Republic and parliament. The
    organizer of the festival of arts in Istanbul, Halil Altindere, has
    also been recently brought to court. His crime? Public humiliation of
    the Turkish army in a photographic exhibit.

    In and atmosphere of growing restrictions on intellectual freedom,
    Hrant Dink was among those charged under Article 301. In July 2006,
    he was given a six-month suspended sentence for "denigrating Turkish
    identity" in one of his articles on the Ottoman-Armenian diaspora.
    Shortly after the six month suspended sentence, a new case opened.
    Like the novelist Orhan Pamuk, he was set to stand trial for
    referring to the 1915 massacre of Armenians as "genocide" during a
    July interview with Reuters. Dink was awaiting his trial on such
    charges at the time of his assassination. He had always maintained
    that his goal was to reconcile the bitter tensions between Turkish
    and Armenian societies. Amidst a deluge of hate mail and threats that
    mounted to what he called "psychological torture," he continued his
    work as an editor at Agos with courage and grace. "The memory of my
    computer is filled with angry, threatening lines sent by citizens
    from this sector," he wrote wistfully in his last column. "I feel
    frightened as a dove but I know that in this country people do not
    touch and disturb the doves. The doves continue their lives in the
    middle of the cities. Yes indeed a bit frightened but at the same
    time free."

    Tragically, he was wrong. He was one was one of dozens of writers who
    was sacrificed and made out to be a criminal in the shadow of Article
    301, where Turkey's burgeoning populist ultra-nationalists perceived
    him to be a traitor and an enemy of the country. For the 100,000 who,
    after his death, marched solemnly in a show of solidarity, there was
    a clear connection between the Orwellian, catch-all provision and his
    cold-blooded assassination. "Article 301 is the killer," read the
    black and white placards written in Armenian on one side, and Turkish
    on the other side. Many believe the criminilization of differing
    opinions has emboldened radicals and led them to falsely believe that
    the state implicitly supports their actions. "To be charged under
    Article 301 is to be branded an enemy of Turkey, to become a figure
    of hate and a target for fanatics and extremists," writes Lucy
    Popescu in the Guardian. "The law is completely contrary to
    international standards protecting the right to freedom of expression
    and endangers the lives of those charged under it." Suat Kiniklioglu,
    director of the German Marshall Fund's office in Ankara ventures a
    similar opinion in an interview with EurasiaNet: "The atmosphere that
    prompted [the assassin] to go after Hrant Dink with a gun was really
    the result of the atmosphere created by the trials brought on by
    article 301. In that respect, the government will need now to really
    take article 301 seriously."

    And thus, the question remains: Will Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    government repeal the penal code anytime soon -- if ever? Formerly at
    the forefront of democratic reforms that propelled Turkey towards the
    European Union, the government now is preoccupied with courting the
    nationalist vote. With presidential elections looming in May,
    followed closely by parliamentary polls in November, it seems highly
    unlikely that Erdogan's party AKP will abolish the law in question,
    given its immense popularity with nationalist voters. As Stephen
    Kinzer points out in the Boston Globe: "Nationalist rhetoric is again
    surfacing in political speeches and militant newspapers. Much of it
    contains ugly insinuations that Armenians, Kurds, and members of
    other minority groups threaten Turkey's national unity and its very
    survival." AKP has increasing felt compelled to use rhetoric that
    gravitates towards the ultra-nationalist end of the spectrum to drown
    out the ultra-nationalist voice coming forth from various other
    politicians on the far-right.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan might be a nationalist and an avid
    supporter of Article, but he is also an artful politician who seeks
    to wed the EU. So, it is hardly surprising that he promptly condemned
    the murder. "A bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of
    expression," he said in a televised news conference as the dire news
    spread around the world. The assassination he said "was an attack on
    our peace and stability," adding that the "treacherous hands" behind
    the shooting would be swiftly brought to justice. However, paying lip
    service to freedom of speech or protection of minorities is barely
    enough to transform the current climate of rising nationalist
    sentiments. The wave of anger and sorrow that gushed forth from both
    Turks and Armenians in reaction to Dink's murder give Erdogan and his
    clan a chance to rethink Article 301, which plays the paramount role
    in fomenting Turkey's culture of ultra-nationalism.

    Handan T. Satiroglu is a sociologist and writer who divides her time
    between the U.S. and Europe.

    http://worldpoliticswatch.com/article.asp x?id=517
Working...
X