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  • TV series sparks free speech row in Turkey

    March 02, 2007

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0302/p07s02-wo eu.html

    TV series sparks free speech row in Turkey

    The hit show 'Valley of the Wolves' was recently pulled off the air
    for stoking nationalist fervor.

    By Yigal Schleifer | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor


    ISTANBUL, TURKEY

    The most talked about television show in Turkey these days is one
    that's not even on the air.

    The wildly popular "Kurtlar Vadisi" ("Valley of the Wolves"), a series
    that chronicles life in Turkey's criminal underworld, was set to
    return for a triumphant second season in early February after a
    one-year hiatus. But, only one episode into its new run on the private
    Show TV network, the series was unceremoniously yanked off the
    airwaves, following a large number of complaints and pressure from the
    government body that oversees Turkish television.

    "Kurtlar Vadisi" has been accused of glorifying violence and extreme
    nationalism. The show tells the story of Polat Alemdar, a patriotic
    undercover intelligence officer who infiltrates the mafia but starts
    operating in the murky zone where the interests of unsavory elements
    of the state and of organized crime meet. It's as if special agent
    Jack Bauer of the hit show "24" took over Tony Soprano's gang, but
    instead of engaging in protection rackets started bumping off enemies
    of the state.

    A spin-off movie, which saw the show's hero going to Iraq and doing
    battle with the US military, is Turkey's highest-grossing movie ever
    but was accused of being crassly anti-American and anti-Semitic. The
    new season was supposed to deal with the problem of Kurdish terrorism,
    but many feared that the show's take on this volatile topic would only
    fan sectarian tensions in Turkey.

    The cancellation of the hit show is raising a debate in Turkey about
    whether limiting free speech in the name of curbing violence and
    nationalism is censorship or simply good government, and whether the
    show is a product of surging nationalism or a contributor to it.

    "It was a dilemma for people who support free speech. They were
    outraged by the show, but yet they couldn't say a word," says Yusuf
    Kanli, chief columnist for the English-language newspaper Turkish
    Daily News.

    Turkish intellectuals have in recent years accused the government of
    stifling free speech by prosecuting writers under article 301, a vague
    law in the penal code that makes it a crime to "insult" Turkish
    identity, even in a work of fiction.

    This time, though, many of those same intellectuals were on the other
    side of the divide, asking the Turkish government to step in and use
    its influence to cancel "Kurtlar Vadisi." It was an irony that was not
    lost on some of the show's supporters.

    "These so-called intellectual journalists and writers who were talking
    so much about the incompatibility of article 301-type legislation in
    Turkey with the European Union, which was built on the notion of free
    speech, now all of a sudden have become the supporters of censure when
    it comes to 'Valley of the Wolves,' " wrote Yilmaz Ozdil, a former
    television executive who is a columnist for the Sabah newspaper.

    But critics of the show say it had crossed the line from fictionalized
    entertainment into something that was stoking what has been a rising
    nationalist wave in Turkey. Cleverly mixing references to real events
    with dramatized scenarios, "Kurtlar Vadisi" - on television and on the
    big screen - consistently touched upon several political and cultural
    hot-button issues, among them a growing anti-Americanism and a fear
    that Turkey will ultimately get dragged into the war in Iraq.

    In the first season, for example, Polat Alemdar, on trial for
    murdering several heroin smugglers who were part of a larger foreign
    plot to destabilize Turkey, is let go after the judge decides that he
    did it for the love of Turkey.

    In the "Kurtlar Vadisi" film, meanwhile, Alemdar and his crew head to
    Iraq to avenge the honor of the Turkish military after American GI's
    arrest a contingent of Turkish special forces, putting hoods over
    their heads while in captivity. Based on a real event - American
    soldiers did arrest several Turkish soldiers in Northern Iraq in July
    2003, putting hoods on their heads - that caused an outrage in Turkey.

    The movie goes on to weave a tale of almost cartoonish blood-thirsty
    Americans wreaking havoc, throwing into the mix a Jewish-American
    doctor who is harvesting organs from the bodies of Iraqi prisoners for
    patients in the West.

    "People look at the movie and the series as a documentary, not
    fiction. That is the problem," says Nilufer Narli, a sociologist at
    Istanbul's Bahcesehir University. "It is not a positive nationalism
    that the show puts forward, but negative nationalism based on fears
    and polarization in Turkey. In this nationalism, there are enemies and
    these enemies need to be destroyed."

    For the series, the recent cancellation was a distinct fall from
    grace. After the successful first season, the gala premiere of the
    "Kurtlar Vadisi" film was able to attract some of Turkey's leading
    figures and top celebrities.

    Analysts say, though, that recent events - most notably the January
    murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink by an extreme
    nationalist 17-year-old - has made many realize that the nationalist
    fervor whipped up by "Kurtlar Vadisi" may be pushing Turkey in a
    dangerous direction.

    "[Canceling the series] was obviously censorship, but if an industry
    decides to produce dangerous junk, then society has the right to have
    some control over this," Irfan Erdogan, a professor of communications
    at Gazi University in Ankara, says. "If the industry has no social
    responsibility, the society has the right to step in."

    www.csmonitor.com <http://www.csmonitor.com/> | Copyright © 2007 The
    Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
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