Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey blocks access to YouTube

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey blocks access to YouTube

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    March 8 2007

    Turkey blocks access to YouTube

    A court rules that clips about the nation's revered modern-day
    founder are an insult.
    By Laura King and Dawn C. Chmielewski, Times Staff Writers
    March 8, 2007


    ISTANBUL, Turkey - Looking to check out the latest videos of
    cavorting kittens and lovelorn lip-synchers on YouTube? If you live
    in Turkey, you're out of luck.

    After receiving a court order, Turkey's largest telecommunications
    provider Wednesday blocked access to the popular video-sharing
    website because it featured clips that were seen as insulting to
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey.

    The censorship is evidence of YouTube's growing social and political
    resonance. It also marks the latest battle between Web titans such as
    YouTube's corporate parent, Google Inc., and foreign governments over
    free speech on the Internet as the companies expand into new markets.

    YouTube and other technologies that allow users to share information
    "shift power away from central institutions to communities,"
    Forrester Research analyst Charlene Li said. "Whenever you hold a lot
    of power, you're very threatened when that power is taken away from
    you. That's what the Internet does, and that is what YouTube is
    doing."

    An Istanbul court ordered the YouTube ban, acting on a prosecutor's
    recommendation. In Turkey, it is a crime punishable by imprisonment
    to denigrate "Turkishness" or Ataturk, and the statute is sometimes
    used to prosecute those who criticize official government policy on a
    wide range of sensitive issues.

    Within hours, visitors signing on to the site from Turkey were
    greeted with a message in Turkish and English saying that access to
    the site had been suspended in accordance with the court decision.

    Turk Telekom, which has a near-monopoly on Internet access in this
    country of 70 million people, took no position on whether the video
    clips in question in fact denigrated Ataturk, a revered figure here.

    "We are not in the position of saying that what YouTube did was an
    insult, that it was right or wrong," Paul Doany, chairman of Turk
    Telekom, told the state-run Anatolia news agency. "A court decision
    was proposed to us, and we are doing what that court decision says."

    YouTube issued a statement expressing disappointment in the Turkish
    government's ban.

    "The Internet is an international phenomenon, and while technology
    can bring great opportunity and access to information globally, it
    can also present new and unique cultural challenges," YouTube said.
    "We respect the authorities in Turkey and are committed to working
    with them to resolve this."

    Google, which bought YouTube in November for $1.65 billion, drew
    criticism last year for acceding to the Chinese government's demands
    that the company block Web searches for material about Taiwan, Tibet,
    democracy and other sensitive issues.

    Yahoo Inc. also was attacked for providing information that helped
    the Chinese government identify a journalist who was later sentenced
    to 10 years in prison on charges of e-mailing state secrets.

    YouTube is only 2 years old, but its growing popularity across the
    globe has resulted in spats with governments. A Brazilian judge in
    January banned access to YouTube from that country because of a
    steamy video involving supermodel Daniela Cicarelli and her
    boyfriend, a Brazilian banker. The ban was lifted after YouTube
    removed the video. The state of Victoria in Australia ordered YouTube
    blocked from 1,600 government schools after a gang of male students
    used it to circulate their videotaped assault on a 17-year-old girl.

    Access to YouTube, with its pop-culture zeitgeist, might not seem
    like an important fundamental right. But in Turkey, freedom of
    expression is an explosive issue - one that has shadowed the
    government's push to gain membership in the European Union.

    The national taboo on freewheeling debate took a lethal turn in
    January, when newspaper editor Hrant Dink, who had campaigned for
    Turkey to acknowledge that the deaths of millions of Armenians
    beginning in 1915 constituted a genocide, was gunned down in daylight
    outside the offices of his bilingual weekly newspaper.

    Turkish journalist Metin Muner called the YouTube ban "seriously
    worrying" in light of the slaying and continuing restrictions on free
    speech.

    "This is perhaps the beginning of something very unpleasant," said
    Muner, who writes for the nationally circulated Milliyet newspaper.

    The flap showed how even an entertainment-oriented site such as
    YouTube could become a platform for the airing of historical grudges
    and grievances. Turkish media reported that in recent days, Greek and
    Turkish nationalists had been posting inflammatory competing videos
    on the site.

    The Hurriyet newspaper reported Wednesday that YouTube had received
    tens of thousands of e-mails protesting the depiction of Ataturk as a
    homosexual, and that the video clips in question had been removed.

    Doany of Turk Telekom said access to the site would be restored if
    the court ruling was rescinded.
Working...
X