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ANKARA: Pressure Mounts on Government to Amend Article 301

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  • ANKARA: Pressure Mounts on Government to Amend Article 301

    Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 26 2007


    Pressure Mounts on Government to Amend Article 301

    Friday , 26 January 2007



    Turkey's leading business group and a European rights watchdog have
    raised concerns over a penal code article, increasing pressure on the
    government to amend the infamous law after a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist tried under it was shot dead by a teenage assailant.

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe said Turkey
    should scrap Article 301 -- which makes it a crime to insult Turkey's
    identity, state institutions and security forces -- from its penal
    code. The existence of this measure, which judicially limits freedom
    of expression, only validates legal and other attacks against
    journalists, a resolution passed by the assembly said.
    In İstanbul, Mustafa Koç, a senior leader of the Turkish
    Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (TÜSİAD),
    complained resistance to changing Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    Code "feeds pessimism" about the future of the country.

    Article 301 has long been criticized by the European Union for
    restricting freedom of expression. Many nongovernmental organizations
    also slam the law, under which numerous intellectuals have ended up
    in the court for "insulting Turkishness." According to critics, the
    law fuels hard-line nationalism and contributed to the murder of
    Hrant Dink, the Armenian-Turkish editor of bilingual Agos newspaper.

    But pressure has grown even higher since Dink was shot dead by a
    17-year-old gunman outside his office in downtown İstanbul last
    Friday. The last article Dink penned before his death was itself a
    strong appeal for the amendment of Article 301; Dink wrote he was
    suffering because he had been convicted for insulting Turkishness and
    spoke of the death threats he received for this.

    "My computer's memory is loaded with sentences full of hatred and
    threats," Dink wrote. "I am just like a pigeon. ... I look around to
    my left and right, in front and behind me as much as it does. My head
    is just as active."
    The government has signaled readiness to change the controversial law
    but has taken no concrete step so far, saying it is awaiting
    proposals from nongovernmental organizations and looking for
    consensus on how it should be changed.

    State Minister Ali Babacan, also Turkey's chief EU negotiator,
    reiterated yesterday that the government was ready to change Article
    301 as, he said, the government was also not happy with the way it
    was implemented. He added, though, amendments to the law would
    require consensus, something difficult to achieve.

    But the NGOs say they have already offered verbal proposals on how
    the article should be changed, tossing the ball into the government's
    court for possible amendments. Dink, widely acknowledged as a voice
    for understanding and reconciliation between Turks and Armenians, was
    given a six-month suspended prison sentence for an article he wrote
    about the alleged genocide of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire in eastern Anatolia. A number of other intellectuals,
    including Nobel winning novelist Orhan Pamuk, have also been tried
    under the same article.

    Some of the mourners at Dink's funeral, which attracted up to 100,000
    people, carried black-and-white banners reading "Murderer 301." Ogün
    Samast, the main suspect in Dink's murder, reportedly said he had
    killed Dink because he insulted "Turkish blood."

    TÜSİAD leaders, addressing a regular convention of the group,
    denounced the killing of Dink. "This revived memories of those eras
    when Turkey was plagued with political murders," said Ömer
    Sabancı, executive board chairman of TÜSİAD, adding that
    the murder should not be seen as an individual reaction.

    "It is clear that this killing has the potential of producing results
    that could change the position Turkey has in international arena,"
    Sabancı said. "To say it more clearly, this attack may create
    the conditions that would make it possible to reverse the progress
    Turkey has achieved in the area of freedoms and to cut Turkey's links
    with the West and make it an inward-looking country."
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