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Turkey Punishes and Rewards Journalists According to Their "Loyalty"

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  • Turkey Punishes and Rewards Journalists According to Their "Loyalty"

    AZG Armenian Daily #055, 26/03/2007


    Human Rights in Turkey

    TURKEY PUNISHES AND REWARDS JOURNALISTS ACCORDING TO THEIR "LOYALTY"

    Relayed from "Reporter Whithout Borders"

    Leaked reports published by the Turkish media on 8 and 9 March show
    that the army and the prime minister's office punish and reward
    journalists according to their "loyalty."

    Leaked reports show army and government abuse accreditation system

    Leaked reports by the army high command and the prime minister's
    office that were published in the Turkish press on 8 and 9 March show
    that the news media are classified according to their support for
    government policies and that the procedures for issuing press
    accreditation are used to undermine critical newspapers and
    journalists and reward those that support the armed forces, Reporters
    Without Borders said today.

    "We condemn this use of black-lists and these attempts to neutralize
    journalists by depriving them of their raw material, information," the
    press freedom organisation said. "The armed forces like to portray
    themselves as the guardians of society and yet they try to gag those
    journalists they consider to be troublesome. Such procedures are not
    compatible with democratic principles. The Turkish should abandon such
    practices aimed at influencing the media."

    Reporters Without Borders said it supported the protests voiced by the
    Turkish Association of Journalists (TGC), the Contemporary Association
    of Journalists (CGD), the Union of Journalists of Turkey (TGS) and the
    Press Council (Basin Konseyi) against the methods of the army high
    Command and the Prime Minister's office.

    Noting that these organisations said the accreditation system had
    always been problematic in Turkey, Reporters Without Borders added:
    "Like them, we hope that the outcry about these reports will help to
    shake up this system and change these practices."

    The aim of the leaked high command's report, written in November 2006
    by the army's departmental directorate for public relations and
    published on 8 March, was to evaluate the "loyalty" of the media
    towards the Turkish Armed Forces (FAT) and to ban those regarded as
    weakest from attending or participating in military activities such as
    news conference and guided tours.

    The report's authors were fully aware of the harm done by a refusal to
    issue accreditation. The report included this comment: "Not granting
    accreditation to media regarded as not very credible has also
    contributed to these media being held in low esteem by the public."

    The report analysed the editorial line of 19 daily newspapers, 18 TV
    stations, eight magazines and five news agencies. There is no mention
    of any pro-Islamist media as the army refuses to grant them any
    accreditation as a matter of principle.

    A footnote said this about the daily Radikal: "This is a newspaper
    that the FAT should follow closely. It is liable at times to
    differentiate itself on the subject of the FAT. During the period
    March-July 2005, the newspaper employed the term 'death' for the FAT
    martyrs. This elicited criticism. The subject was raised on 21 July
    2005 during a briefing for the media and the newspaper has since
    improved its editorial line thanks to the sensitivity of the managing
    editor, Ismet Barkan." As a result, the army recommended that the
    newspaper's accreditation should be renewed but that the four
    columnist who had criticised the FAT - Nuray Mert, Yildirim Türker,
    Murat Belge and Hasan Celal Güzel - should not receive individual
    accreditation.

    The army report recommended that accreditation of the UK-based Jane's
    Defence Weekly should be maintained but that its correspondent, Lale
    Sariibrahimoglu, should not be invited to FAT activities for
    journalists. Her accreditation had already been cancelled by the army
    when she wrote for the conservative daily Bugün.

    In a final example, the report noted that Erol Mütercimler, the
    presenter of the programme "Press Club," was a fierce critic of the
    army, even getting into conspiracy theory. It recommended that his TV
    station's accreditation should be provisionally suspended and that the
    station's owner, Ufuk Güldemir, and some of its journalists, should be
    barred from military activities for the press.

    On 9 March, the day after the leaked report was first published, the
    army issued a press release announcing a judicial investigation,
    without saying whether it was an internal investigation or one
    targeted at the media that had published the report.

    The same day, the daily Cumhuriyet published an article on the
    "Monthly report by the prime minister's office," consisting of a sort
    of classification of the media. The prime minister's press office
    described the article as "unreal and deliberate" and insisted that "no
    such report has ever been submitted to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan."

    According to the newspaper, the report even included the fact tha
    journalists Nuray Basaran, Enis Berberoglu, Oral Calislar and Güngör
    Uras drank 2002 vintage Syrah Calvet French red wine during a visit to
    Lebanon on 5 July 2005.

    The Islamist daily Yeni Safak (New Dawn) is identified in the report
    as an essential support for Prime Minister Erdogan and his
    government. The committed Islamist daily Vakit (Time) is praised for
    "deflecting criticism of the government over the Muslim headscarf"and
    the Islamist daily Zaman is praised for being "free of prejudice
    towards any group or person."

    Other newspapers are not held in such high esteem. The republican
    Cumhuriyet is "rarely objective," the liberal centrist Millyet is said
    to have improved after Sedat Ergin became its editor and "the articles
    and content became more positive." The liberal right daily Sabah
    (Morning) is accused of becoming more negative, publishing fewer
    stories about the government and putting them on the inside paged when
    it did.

    As for the liberal right newspaper Hürriyet (Freedom), the report says
    it "no longer puts the government's activities on its front page since
    its leading journalists were not allowed on the prime minister's plane
    during and his US visit, and the reports on the government are quite
    short."

    The European Union, which Turkey wants to join, has said Turkey will
    not be able to meet democratic standards as long as the army continues
    to exercise influence over non-military matters. The Turkish Armed
    Forces, which often portray themselves as a bulwark against
    Islamism,have seized power three times, the last one in 1980.

    By Jean Eckian

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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