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Touching The Nerve Of Turkishness In The Spotlight Article 301

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  • Touching The Nerve Of Turkishness In The Spotlight Article 301

    TOUCHING THE NERVE OF TURKISHNESS IN THE SPOTLIGHT ARTICLE 301
    By Vincent Boland

    FT
    July 23 2007 03:00

    In Istanbul tomorrow, in the splendid surroundings of the Ottoman-era
    Dolmabahce Palace on the European shore of the Bosphorus, three
    people who have done their bit for freedom of expression in Turkey
    will receive a small but important acknowledgement. They will receive
    the Turkish Journalists' Association's annual press freedom prize. It
    is a ceremony that coincides with a critical moment in the country's
    continuing battle for and with free speech.

    At first glance, the Turkish media seems to be as free, colourful,
    irreverent, partisan, corporate-dominated, and occasionally
    irresponsible as its British counterpart. Newsstands groan under
    the weight of available titles. All-news TV channels proliferate,
    offering a nationwide forum for an informative debate during the
    general election campaign of the past few weeks. Facts can sometimes be
    hard to find in this free-for-all, but there is no shortage of opinion.

    Then there is Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which changes
    the terms of the debate about freedom of expression. This article,
    slipped into a revision of the fascist-era code three years ago while
    the European Union was looking the other way, aspires to protect
    the concept of "Turkishness" - the essence of the republic, its
    institutions and its accepted historical narratives - from criticism
    or denigration. In practice, this means that any critical questioning
    of sensitive historical issues, from Armenia to Cyprus to the Kurds,
    can lead to the writer's prosecution.

    The article has been used most assiduously by a group of nationalist
    lawyers to prosecute writers, journalists and commentators whose
    books, views or articles touched some reactionary nerve or other. This
    group makes no apologies for rushing to court at the merest hint of
    a slighting of the nation, as if Turkey were a delicate girl whose
    honour needed protecting at all costs. Although Turkey has many of the
    outward trappings of a liberal democracy, its governing institutions
    are steeped in authoritarianism. They have little truck with those
    whose patriotism they would question.

    Kemal Kerincsiz, chairman of the jurists' union that has brought most
    of the prosecutions, says: "Some countries can survive without this
    type of law, but Turkey cannot. It is vital to protect the Turkish
    nation if it is to remain standing." Turkey's original penal code in
    effect prohibited everything that was not specifically authorised. The
    revised version has remnants of this thinking, which is why Article
    301 seems to fit so snugly into it.

    Most of the cases brought under Article 301 have failed, but not before
    the defendants have gone to the expense and trouble of putting up a
    defence against such a slippery charge. The recipients of tomorrow's
    award, a citation that has been given since 1989, are not the only
    people to have had to endure this painful and degrading process,
    but they are among the most prominent and admired. They are being
    given the award "in the name of all journalists and writers who have
    suffered under Article 301".

    One of the recipients is Ragip Zarakolu, one of Turkey's leading
    publishers and the frequent target of prosecutions and attacks by
    the far right. His firm, Belge, has published historical books that
    enrage die-hard nationalists - especially on the painful subject of
    Armenia and the mass murder of Ottoman Armenians in the last days of
    the empire. "It's good to get an award like this in my own country,"
    Mr Zarakolu said, adding that "it is not an accident this article is
    in the penal code."

    Another recipient is Gulcin Cayligil, a lawyer who has defended
    journalists facing prosecution.

    The third will be present only in spirit. Hrant Dink, the Turkish-
    Armenian publisher of Agos, a weekly newspaper, was murdered in
    January on an Istanbul street. He had been a pioneer in urging Turkey
    to come to terms with the murder of Armenians during the last days of
    the Ottoman Empire. A 17-year-old boy is on trial for his murder and
    has cited Mr Dink's opinions, as reported on nationalist websites,
    as a motive.

    The measure remains on the statute book in spite of condemnation from
    bodies such as the EU and Amnesty International, and in spite of an
    occasional half-hearted promise from the outgoing government that it
    might amend it. So Turkey's commitment to freedom of expression will
    always be less than it seems, critics and victims of the article say.

    As Orhan Erinc, chairman of the committee that chose this year's
    winners, says: "The fact we keep having to give this prize is proof
    that, despite what the politicians say, freedom of expression is
    still not guaranteed in Turkey."
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