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  • IFEX: TURKEY Bulletin (historian takes Article 301 to ECHR

    __________________________________________________ _______________
    DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
    EXCHANGE (IFEX) CLEARING HOUSE
    555 Richmond St. West, # 1101, PO Box 407
    Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5V 3B1
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    alerts e-mail: [email protected] general e-mail: [email protected]
    Internet site: http://www.ifex.org/

    IFEX - News from the international freedom of expression community
    ________________________________________ _________________________

    ALERT - TURKEY

    12 July 2007

    Historian takes Article 301 to ECHR to protest threat to academic research

    SOURCE: IPS Communication Foundation (BIANET), Istanbul

    (BIANET/IFEX) - Taner Akcam, a professor of history at Minnesota
    University, in the United States, who had been investigated for his claims
    of an Armenian genocide, has decided to take Article 301, which has put
    around 100 academics, journalists and writers on trial, to the European
    Court of Human Rights (ECHR) to protest against the law's threat to
    academic research.

    Akcam argues that the investigations Turkey launches into academic
    research, using Article 301, are contrary to the European Convention of
    Human Rights ( http://conventions.coe.int/treaty/en/Treaties/Html /005.htm
    ), endorsed by Turkey.

    Article 301 contravenes, in particular, articles 7, 10 and 14 of the
    Convention because it limits freedom of expression.

    Facing history is not a crime but a necessity, Akcam says.

    "My goal is to see Turkey become a totally free and democratic country.
    However, as long as academic discussions are considered criminal in Turkey,
    this is not possible. Facing history and human rights violations of the
    past cannot be a crime. Rather, they are a precondition for peace and
    regional rapprochement," he said.

    Akcam sees his role as facilitating this process.

    Akcam's lawyer for the ECHR application is International Law Professor Dr.
    Payam Akhavan of McGill University (Montreal, Canada), who was an advisor
    on the international crime courts formed to deal with the war crimes of
    Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

    According to Dr. Akhavan, "Freedom of speech should only be limited in
    cases of expressions of hate, not in discourses against hate."

    Akcam himself almost fell victim to the notorious law. After a complaint to
    a chief public prosecutor's office in Eyüp, Istanbul, by a person named
    Recep Akkus, an investigation against Akcam was instigated by the Sisli
    chief public prosecutor's office (also in Istanbul). This investigation was
    dismissed in March 2007.

    Public prosecutor Muhittin Ayata of the Sisli office had evaluated an
    article entitled "Hrant Dink, 301 and a Criminal Complaint", which was
    published in the weekly "Agos" newspaper on 6 October 2006. In the article,
    Akcam had written, "I believe that what happened between 1915 and 1917 was
    a genocide." No suit was brought against Akcam.

    In the dismissal of proceedings, the court said that "the suspect is a
    history professor who, in all his articles and conference papers, has
    expressed the idea that the events of 1915-1919 can be defined as a
    genocide. When the article which is subject of a complaint is considered as
    a whole, it becomes clear that there are no attempts to degrade
    Turkishness, that the text remains within the framework of freedom of
    thought as defined by Article 10 of the European Convention of Human
    Rights, that there is no incitement to crime, no praise of crimes or
    criminals, and no incitement to hatred and hostility".

    For further information contact Nadire Mater at BIANET, Faikpasa Yokusu,
    No. 41, Antikhane, Kat: 3, D.8-9, Cukurcuma, Beyoglu, Istanbul, Turkey,
    tel: +90 212 251 1503, fax: +90 212 251 1609, e-mail: [email protected],
    Internet: http://www.bianet.org

    The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of
    BIANET. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please credit
    BIANET.
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