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NGOs Propose Changes To Turkey's Freedom-Curbing Law Blamed For Jour

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  • NGOs Propose Changes To Turkey's Freedom-Curbing Law Blamed For Jour

    NGOS PROPOSE CHANGES TO TURKEY'S FREEDOM-CURBING LAW BLAMED FOR JOURNALIST'S SLAYING

    AP Worldstream
    Feb 08, 2007

    A group of activists on Thursday submitted a proposal to the government
    to amend Turkey's infamous article 301 of the penal code, which has
    been used to prosecute intellectuals and has been blamed for the
    killing of a journalist.

    Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and slain ethnic Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink were both prosecuted under the broad law that
    bans the denigration of "Turkishness." Both had spoken out about the
    mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th century. Numerous other
    writers, journalists and academics have also been prosecuted.

    Dink, the editor of the minority Agos newspaper, was shot dead outside
    his Istanbul office on Jan. 19. His murder revived a debate about
    the need to change the problematic article. Many blamed article 301
    for his slaying, saying his prosecution had made him a target for
    ultranationalist groups.

    On Thursday, a group of trade unions and other nongovernmental
    organizations proposed a new wording to the article, which they said
    sets clearer limits for what would constitute insult and what would
    constitute criticism.

    There was no immediate reaction from the government, which has said
    it is willing to amend the article but is waiting for recommendations
    from civil society groups.

    Newspapers, however, have criticized the proposed amendment saying
    it would not put a stop to the prosecutions.

    The proposal, among other things, replaces "insulting Turkishness"
    with wording that would translate as "openly abasing and deriding"
    Turkishness.

    "In its existing form (the article) is too vague and open to
    interpretations," said Davut Okutcu, who heads the Istanbul-based
    Economic Development Foundation. "There was a need for a wording
    purified of vague expressions which would not open the way to
    unnecessary prosecution."

    Pamuk, who won the Nobel Prize in literature last year, also had
    faced trial in Turkey for his comments on the Armenian killings and
    had been accused of treason for doing so. His case was thrown out on
    a technicality.

    Dink's murder inspired a massive outpouring of support for liberal
    values, including freedom of expression, tolerance and reconciliation
    between Armenians and Turks,

    But the killing also pointed to Turkey's continuing problems with
    extreme nationalism. Most Turks suspect the killing might be linked
    to ultranationalist groups.
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