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Turkey May Repeal Law on `Insulting Turkishness,' Gul Says

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  • Turkey May Repeal Law on `Insulting Turkishness,' Gul Says

    Bloomberg
    Jan 28 2007

    Turkey May Repeal Law on `Insulting Turkishness,' Gul Says

    By Gregory Viscusi

    Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Turkey will weaken or repeal a law against
    insulting the nation that has been used to prosecute writers and
    intellectuals, Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Gul said.

    ``We will change that law,'' Gul said in an interview yesterday at
    annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
    Asked if the change could come before Presidential elections, Gul
    answered ``it could come even before the elections.''

    Turkey's parliament will pick a new president in May. Gul's governing
    Justice and Development Party isn't slated to face legislative
    elections until November, though some politicians have called for
    bringing those elections forward. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    and Gul, who is also foreign minister, are possible presidential
    candidates. Neither has declared his intentions.

    Article 301 of the country's penal code outlaws ``insulting
    Turkishness.'' That law was used to convict Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink to a six-month suspended prison term in July
    for a 2004 article he wrote about the massacre of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turkish troops during World War I.

    Dink was murdered Jan. 19 by a teenage nationalist. Tens of thousands
    of Turks attended his funeral, which turned into a protest against
    Article 301. Nobel Prize-winner Orhan Pamuk and other Turkish writers
    have been prosecuted under the law, though Dink's was the sole
    conviction. The charges are generally brought by lawyers linked to
    nationalist movements, not by the government.

    Armenians say at least 1.5 million of their people were slaughtered
    in a genocide from 1915. Turkey says the number is inflated and both
    Turks and Armenians were killed during ethnic clashes.
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