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Turkey: Government To Modify Penal Code For EU Entry

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  • Turkey: Government To Modify Penal Code For EU Entry

    TURKEY: GOVERNMENT TO MODIFY PENAL CODE FOR EU ENTRY

    Adnkronos International Italia, Italy
    Oct 4 2007

    Ankara, 3 Oct. (AKI) - The Turkish Government is reportedly about
    to modify a controversial article of its penal code in a bid to lift
    its chances of joining the European Union, according to the Turkish
    Daily News.

    The daily newspaper leaked the news quoting anonymous sources from
    the leadership of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP),
    the party of premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan and president Abdullah Gul.

    The paper said the government would introduce radical changes to
    Article 301 of Turkey's penal code before the annual report of the
    European Commission on the state of negotiations due in early November.

    Article 301 makes it a crime to insult "Turkishness", the government,
    the judiciary and the military and was one of several law reforms
    that took effect in June 2005.

    It has been used in a number of high profile cases including the
    one against Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk, writer Elif Shafak and
    Turkish Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, who was allegedly murdered
    by an ultranationalist in January this year.

    According to the Turkish Daily News, the AKP has no intention of
    eliminating the law, simply substituting the concept of "Turkish
    identity" with "Turkish nation".

    Under the current law, the public prosecutor can launch investigations
    based on the law but under the changes, the approval of the Justice
    Minister would also be needed before the start of any inquiry.

    Another proposal would replace a prison term with a fine, but the
    AKP questioned whether this reform would be approved.

    Under Article 301, a person found guilty of denigrating "Turkishness",
    the government, judiciary or the military can face a prison term of
    between six months and three years.

    In cases where it is found to have occurred outside Turkey, the jail
    term can be increased by a third.

    Orhan Pamuk (Photo) was charged under Turkish law in December 2005
    after making statements to a Swiss magazine about the Turkish genocide
    of Armenians and Kurds during World War I. The charges were later
    dropped, however.

    In 2006 author Elif Safak and the late journalist Hrant Dink were
    prosecuted in separate cases for "insulting Turkishness".

    http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/E nglish/Politics/?id=1.0.1380896407
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