Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish activists launch civil disobedience campaign against law

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

  • Turkish activists launch civil disobedience campaign against law

    Turkish activists launch civil disobedience campaign against law
    curbing free speech

    AP Worldstream
    Feb 23, 2007

    A group of activists invited prosecutors to press charges against them
    on Friday in a protest against a law that restricts free speech and
    has been used to prosecute intellectuals.

    Five members of the small Powerful Turkey Party stood in front of a
    prosecutor at a courthouse and repeated statements by Nobel
    Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk, slain journalist Hrant Dink and
    other intellectuals that were used as evidence to prosecute them under
    Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which bans insults to Turkish
    identity.

    The group, including party leader Tuna Beklevic, then asked the
    prosecutor to file charges against them. Prosecutors would have to
    investigate Beklevic and his friends before opening any lawsuit, and
    none of the activists were arrested.

    More members of the party, which has just a few thousand adherents in
    a country of 70 million, plan to conduct a similar act of civil
    disobedience next week.

    Article 301 makes denigrating Turkish identity a crime punishable by
    up to three years in prison.

    Pamuk and Dink had both spoken out about the mass killings of
    Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century, an issue that remains
    sensitive today. Numerous other writers, journalists and academics
    have also been prosecuted.

    Dink, an ethnic Armenian newspaper editor, was shot outside his
    Istanbul office on Jan. 19 and his murder revived a debate about the
    law. His prosecution under Article 301 turned him into a reviled
    figure among radical nationalists, some of whom were arrested in his
    killing.
Working...
X