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ANKARA: 301 Concerns Resurface In Dink Trial

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  • ANKARA: 301 Concerns Resurface In Dink Trial

    301 CONCERNS RESURFACE IN DINK TRIAL
    Ercan Yavuz

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 2 2007

    The Ýstanbul 14th Criminal Court on Monday resumed the trial of
    suspects in the killing of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    in a case that brought up discussions on the Turkish Penal Code's
    (TCK) Article 301, under which Dink was convicted and which is also
    seen as a test of the judiciary in investigating possible negligence
    by authorities.

    Demonstrators at his funeral in January carried banners reading "301
    is the murderer," after Dink was shot dead in broad daylight in front
    of his newspaper Agos' office. "Hrant Dink's death is linked to 301,"
    said Claudia Roth, a leader of the German opposition Greens, who
    is in Ýstanbul to attend the hearing. "It was 301 that killed him,
    and that's why I am here."

    European Commissioner for Enlargement Olli Rehn also made a statement
    on Monday emphasizing the EU's sensitivity about changing 301. He
    said the European Union has been waiting for a change since 2004 and
    called on the government to either abolish the article or review it
    as necessary without further delay.

    Article 301, which criminalizes "insulting Turkishness," is seen
    as a serious obstacle to freedom of speech in Turkey by Turkish
    intellectuals and the European Union. In addition to Dink, Nobel
    Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and novelist Elif Þafak stood trial under
    Article 301; however, the government has still not made any visible
    moves to amend it.

    But that situation might be changing, sources close to the government
    indicate, claiming that the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
    is considering changes to the infamous article. The AK Party has
    reportedly sought alternative texts for the article from two prominent
    jurists, Former dead of the Supreme Court of Appeals Sami Selcuk and
    Professor Ýzzet Ozgenc, one of the architects of the TCK.

    The government is now expected to replace Article 301 by one of two
    alternative texts, or combine the two, which are very similar, in a
    new paragraph.

    One of the points common to Article 301 in the alternative paragraphs
    proposed by Selcuk and Ozgenc is replacing the concept of "Turkishness"
    with the word "Turkish nation," and replacing the word "Republic,"
    with the expression "the State of the Turkish Republic."

    Both jurists believe that prosecutors should require special
    permission from a higher authority to start a probe under 301, but the
    authorities they point to differ significantly. While Selcuk believes
    this authority should lie with the president as the head of state,
    Professor Ozgenc defends that it should lie with the minister of
    justice, as it previously used to. In January of last year, the
    government requested all civil society organizations to agree on
    an alternative paragraph to modify the article, but civil groups
    failed to reach consensus on a single text. Most experts propose one
    of two possible methods to alleviate the problems caused by 301. A
    number of legal experts and a significant number of civil society
    organizations would like to see the article abolished entirely. The
    European Union is also of that opinion. A second opinion is to amend
    the article instead of removing it from the penal code, which is what
    the government is likely to opt for.

    What does 301 say?

    1. Public denigration of Turkishness, the Republic or Parliament
    shall be punishable by imprisonment of six months to three years. 2.

    Public denigration of the Government of the Republic of Turkey,
    the judicial institutions of the State and the military and police
    structures shall be punishable by imprisonment of six months to
    two years.

    Selcuk's proposal

    The version put forward by the former head of the Supreme Court of
    Appeals is said to be the most appealing to the government. Selcuk
    asserts that the expression "the Turkish nation," should replace the
    word "Turkishness" in the original text. The Turkish nation, Selcuk
    says, is defined as a group of people linked to the state through the
    bond of citizenship. In addition, Selcuk proposes to replace the word
    Republic with "the State of the Republic of Turkey." He also offers
    rephrasing the words "the Parliament of Turkey, the Government of
    the Republic of Turkey and the judicial institutions of the State,"
    to "the organs of the legislature, the executive and the judiciary."

    Selcuk also proposes that the phrases "military or police structures"
    to be changed to "military, security and forces concerned with
    security."

    Selcuk says presidential permission should be required to conduct a
    trial under 301.

    Ozgenc's proposal

    Professor Ozgenc has already submitted his version of the text to the
    head of the AK Party parliamentary group, Sadullah Ergin. Ozgenc's
    text is similar to that of Selcuk insofar as it asserts that the term
    Turkishness be replaced with "the Turkish nation." However, unlike
    Selcuk, Ozgenc proposes that the authority to grant permission for a
    prosecutor to start a 301 investigation should be held by the justice
    minister, as was the case under the previous penal code.

    --Boundary_(ID_7kNHwZ7bVHyihBVS573x4A)--
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