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  • Killing sparks 'Turkishness' row

    Killing sparks 'Turkishness' row
    By Sarah Rainsford

    BBC News, Istanbul
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/eur ope/6343809.stm

    2007/02/09 13:35:26 GMT

    Since Hrant Dink was shot, Murat Belge has not left home alone.

    There are armed police on 24-hour watch outside his house and a
    plain-clothes detective by his side at all times.

    Like Hrant Dink, Murat Belge was put on trial last year for insulting
    Turkishness. Now he has been given protection by the state.

    "Everyone is in danger. This is getting very savage," the journalist
    and academic believes. "All around there are similar groups aching
    to murder someone for their country. It is shocking."

    Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink was shot dead on 19
    January and a teenage nationalist has been charged with the murder.

    Dink had spoken out about the mass killing of Armenians by Turks in
    the early 20th Century.

    New proposal

    Demands for the repeal or reform of the law used against Dink -
    known as Article 301 - have been growing here since tens of thousands
    flooded the streets for his funeral. Many people carried signs that
    read "Murderer: 301".

    Now a group representing some of Turkey's most powerful civic groups
    and trade unions has come up with a proposal on how to change the law.

    "In its current form Article 301 is very vague and open to
    interpretation," explained Davut Okutcu, one author of the proposal
    presented in Istanbul on Thursday.

    "We have formulated this demand because we believe there is a need
    for change. Now we expect the government to evaluate it."

    The proposal specifies a tighter definition of "Turkishness" in the
    law and replaces the term "insult" with "debase and deride". It also
    suggests that a judge must prove intent, as well as a "clear and
    imminent danger," and reduces the maximum sentence from three years
    in prison to two.

    Changes 'not enough'

    "How the article should be worded is the job of the government. What
    we want to stress are the main items that should be incorporated in any
    change," another of the report's authors, Pekin Baran, told the BBC.

    He admitted that the draft proposal was a compromise solution
    reflecting the divisions in Turkish society.

    People see those who want to change the law as supporters of the West
    Barbaros Devecioglu NTV radio producer

    "These criteria are the platform on which we could all find common
    ground," he said.

    But two groups walked out of the discussions and they and others have
    already criticised the suggested changes as too timid.

    "The murder of Hrant Dink showed that minimal changes to the wording
    of the law are not enough," said Gencay Gursoy, head of the Doctors'
    Union, which refused to endorse the proposal.

    "The crowds at Hrant Dink's funeral were an expression of democratic
    opinion here.

    Those people want Article 301 dissolved or changed very radically. It
    was partly responsible for his murder," he insisted.

    Government cautious

    The government has said it would consider making changes to Article
    301.

    "We are open to suggestions," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    repeated recently.

    "We can work on making changes," he said, and stressed that he had
    requested concrete proposals from civil society groups last November.

    But there is no sign the government is ready to abolish the law
    altogether, especially in an election year when all parties are
    competing for the nationalist vote.

    It seems there is good reason for the politicians to be wary.

    When Article 301 was discussed on a phone-in show on NTV radio last
    week most callers did not want any change to the law at all.

    Political upheaval

    "This law protects Turkey and Turkishness. Who does it harm? Not me,
    or other patriots," Recep shouted. "The people who want this law
    removed have a problem with Turkey."

    "Most people in Turkey see any change to Article 301 as an attack,
    as an act of aggression against the Republic," explained producer
    Barbaros Devecioglu. He has noticed an increasingly nationalistic
    tone to calls in recent months.

    "People see those who want to change the law as supporters of the
    West. They are cynical about the demand, and what lies behind it,"
    he said.

    The EU has long called for changes in Article 301, arguing that the law
    places severe restrictions on free speech in Turkey. Some 50 writers
    have been brought to trial here, including Nobel-prize winner Orhan
    Pamuk, though most cases have eventually been dismissed by the judge.

    Since Hrant Dink was killed, the calls for change inside the country
    have grown louder.

    "We should not forget that Turkish society has proved it is capable
    of substantial reforms in the last five years or so," Pekin Baran
    argued, though he believes abolishing 301 is unrealistic in the
    current climate.

    "I don't think we are witnessing the end of the reform process. We
    are going through a very difficult point which is exacerbated by the
    fact we have two elections this year. But we are a democratic society."

    The authors of the new-look 301 will now submit their proposal to
    the government, as requested.

    "They threw the ball to civil society and we have thrown it back.

    This will put pressure on the government. They will have to work with
    it," said Davut Okutcu.

    "Whether they are strong enough to make a decision in an election year,
    we'll have to see."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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