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RSF: Journalists Continue To Be Threatened and Prosecuted

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  • RSF: Journalists Continue To Be Threatened and Prosecuted

    Reporters without borders (press release), France
    Jan 30 2007

    Despite reassuring statements from government officials, journalists
    continue to be threatened and prosecuted

    Reporters Without Borders today reiterated its call for the repeal of
    article 301 of the criminal code punishing attacks on the Turkish
    identity, as the country continued to be abuzz with protests and
    reactions to the 19 January murder of newspaper editor Hrant Dink,
    whose funeral on 23 January drew 100,000 mourners.

    The editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, Dink had
    been convicted under article 301 and was facing another prosecution
    under the same article at the time of his death. Foreign minister
    Abdullah Gül has said the article is clearly problematic and that
    changes need to be made. While supporting his comments, Reporters
    Without Borders believes the article should be completely repealed.

    Gül's comment is not the first. Last November, a European Union
    commission that is monitoring Turkey's progress towards joining the
    EU stressed that: `Article 301 and other provisions of the Turkish
    penal code that restrict freedom of expression need to be brought in
    line with the European Convention of Human Rights.' Anticipating the
    commission's comments, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had
    already appealed to civil society to suggest how the article could be
    reformed.

    `Despite that, nothing concrete has so far been initiated and for
    this reason, we would like to stress today that promises are not
    enough,' Reporters Without Borders said today.

    A person who has confessed to being one of the instigators of Dink's
    murder, Yasin Hayal, uttered threats against Nobel literature
    laureate Orhan Pamuk when he was brought before an Istanbul court
    last week. Ogün Samast, the 17-year-old youth who fired the shots
    that killed Dink, told police when first questioned that he `felt no
    remorse.' He said Dink had deserved to die for insulting the Turkish
    people

    Nationalism was the driving force behind Dink's murder and it
    continues to fuel threats against journalists. Agos contributors
    requested, and obtained, police protection after getting death
    threats in an e-mail message signed by the Turkish Brigades for
    Revenge (TIT). It was a TIT member, Semih Tufan Günalthay, who
    ordered the 1998 murder of Akin Birdal, Turkey's leading human rights
    activist. At least six journalists and writers are currently getting
    police protection.

    A 36-year-old ex-soldier yesterday surrendered to the police after
    threatening to blow up a ferry in northwestern Turkey in protest
    against the pro-Armenian slogans chanted at Dink's funeral. The man,
    who was carrying a very powerful kind of explosive known as C4,
    unfurled a Turkish flag over the ferry and announced that: `I did it
    for Turkey.' The daily newspaper Tercuman said on 26 January that
    those who were not proud of being Turkish should leave the country.

    Although the repeal of article 301 is now being widely discussed,
    journalists are still being prosecuted under it. They include Umur
    Hozatli, who is being prosecuted over two articles published last
    September in which he criticised a police raid on the premises of
    Özgür Radio and the leftist weekly Atilim and accused the police of
    `cooperating with certain judges to illegally imprison people
    regarded as separatists or terrorists.'

    Last November, Reporters Without Borders noted that at least 65
    people, including many journalists and writers, had been prosecuted
    under article 301 since its adoption as part of the new criminal code
    in June 2005.

    Six people have so far been charged in connection with Dink's murder.
    Samast is charged with shooting Dink. Hayal is accused of being one
    of the instigators. Ahmet Iskender, Ersin Yolcu, Zeynel Abidin Yavuz
    and Erhan Tucel, are also charged with inciting the murder. Tucel is
    a student who supports a national group in Trabzon, Samast's home
    town.

    Dink was killed by several shots fired at him outside the Istanbul
    offices of Agos, for which he wrote columns as well as being the
    editor. A well-known journalist and one who was respected by his
    colleagues, Dink had been the target of several prosecutions over his
    views on the massacre of Armenians under the Ottoman empire. In 2005,
    he received six-month suspended sentence for `humiliating Turkish
    identity.' He was prosecuted again in September 2006 over an
    interview he gave to Reuters in which he referred to the massacres in
    Anatolia during the First World War as `genocide.' He had been facing
    a possible three-year prison sentence.

    http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_arti cle718
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