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Turkish PM Says He Favours Changing Free Speech Law

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  • Turkish PM Says He Favours Changing Free Speech Law

    TURKISH PM SAYS HE FAVOURS CHANGING FREE SPEECH LAW

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 15, 2007 Tuesday 3:19 PM GMT

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday he favoured
    amending a widely criticised law used to prosecute dozens of
    intellectuals, but did not say when his government would do so.

    "We are not resisting (changes) to Article 301. If we get a reasonable
    proposal, we can work on it," Erdogan told the annual assembly of
    media watchdog International Press Institute (IPI) in Istanbul.

    Article 301 calls for jail terms of between six months and three years
    for "denigrating Turkishness," the Republic and state institutions such
    as the government, parliament, the judiciary and the security forces,
    and requires an increased penalty if the crime is committed abroad.

    Dozens of intellectuals, among them 2006 Nobel literature laureate
    Orhan Pamuk, have been charged under the article, mostly for contesting
    the official line on the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman
    Empire.

    The law has also been blamed for fueling nationalist hatred towards
    ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was convicted under the
    article and was gunned down in January by a suspected ultra-nationalist
    after receiving threats.

    The European Union, which Turkey is seeking to join, has slammed the
    article on many occasions as a threat to freedom of speech and has
    urged Ankara to either amend or scrap it.

    In a resolution adopted Monday at its general assembly, the IPI urged
    Turkey to revise Article 301 and purge its penal code of "all articles
    used to restrict journalists' ability to report freely and express
    their opinion."
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