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Ankara Moves To Amend Infamous Article 301

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  • Ankara Moves To Amend Infamous Article 301

    ANKARA MOVES TO AMEND INFAMOUS ARTICLE 301

    European Report
    November 8, 2007

    In response to the European Commission's decision to suspend opening
    negotiations with Turkey on one of the most important policy areas
    covering the judiciary and human rights, the government in Ankara has
    decided to change the controversial article 301 of the Penal Code,
    which restricts freedom of expression. Turkey's Justice Minister
    Mehmet Ali Sahin said on 6 November that a new bill would be put
    before the parliament "soon".

    "Several drafts have been prepared in line with proposals by civic
    groups. The cabinet will discuss them at the first opportunity,
    select one and submit it to parliament," said Sahin to the Anatolia
    news agency. His statement came just hours after the EU's Enlargement
    Commissioner Olli Rehn said that restrictions on freedom of expression
    stemming from Article 301, which makes it a crime to insult Turkish
    national identity, were blocking Turkey's progress towards EU
    membership. Presenting Turkey's annual report on progress towards EU
    membership, Rehn warned that chapter 23 covering the judiciary and
    human rights would onlybe opened for negotiations if Turkey repeals
    or changes the much-criticised article of its penal code. The article
    made it possible for prosecutors to put the Nobel Prize-winning author
    Orhan Pamuk and the Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink on trial for
    referring to the 1915 mass killings of Armenians. "It is not acceptable
    that writers, journalists, academics and other intellectuals ... are
    prosecuted for simply expressing a critical but completely non-violent
    opinion," said Rehn. The Commission is demanding that the provisions
    of Article 301 be brought into line with the European Convention
    on Human Rights and case law of the European Court of Human Rights,
    the benchmarks for the protection of human rights in Europe.
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