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ANKARA: Erdogan noncommittal on changes to Article 301

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  • ANKARA: Erdogan noncommittal on changes to Article 301

    Today's Zaman, Turkey -
    Jan 27 2007


    Erdogan noncommittal on changes to Article 301


    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has declined to give
    assurance to the EU over changing Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    Code (TCK) but reaffirmed that his government was open to idea of
    amending the article.
    The EU has bitterly criticized Article 301, saying it restricts
    freedom of expression, but Turkey has so far avoided taking steps to
    directly amend it. Pressure on the government to change the
    controversial article, under which numerous writers, intellectuals
    and journalists have landed in court, has been increasing since the
    murder of a Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor.
    Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of the bilingual Agos newspaper, was shot
    dead by a 17-year-old assailant outside his office on Friday. He had
    been tried under Article 301 for "insulting Turkishness" and
    sentenced to a six-month suspended imprisonment for an article he
    wrote about an alleged genocide of Armenians at the hands of the
    Ottoman Empire.
    Turkey's top business group, the Turkish Industrialists and
    Businessmen's Association (TÜSİAD), and the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe have raised concerns over the
    article.
    Ambassadors of EU countries, meeting with Erdogan at a dinner on
    Wednesday evening in Ankara, clearly expressed the bloc's
    expectations for changes to Article 301, according to the private
    ANKA news agency.
    Erdogan made no reference to Article 301 in his speech to the
    ambassadors but touched on the issue in a question-and-answer
    session. Responding to the diplomats' questions, Erdogan
    repeated the line of his government and said most of the problems
    stemmed from the way the law was implemented.
    He also complained that the EU had not expressed any concern over
    Article 301 in its preparatory stage and added that some EU member
    countries also had similar laws in their national codes.
    The EU continues to have firm expectations that Article 301 be
    amended, but some ambassadors showed "understanding" toward the
    Turkish government's position, given that two critical elections lay
    ahead, according to ANKA.
    Presidential elections are scheduled for May and parliamentary
    elections will take place in November. But in his speech,
    Erdogan said the upcoming elections would not affect the
    government's determination for reforms.
    In comments on Dink's killing, Erdogan said the attack was
    against Turkey. During Dink's funeral, up to 100,000 people gathered
    in Istanbul to attend and carried banners reading "We are all
    Armenians" and "We are all Hrant Dink."
    "Turkey is the inheritor of a great civilization that embraced people
    of different races and faiths for centuries," Erdogan told the
    ambassadors.

    27.01.2007

    Ankara Today's Zaman with wires

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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