Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish Leader Resists Nixing Insult Law

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish Leader Resists Nixing Insult Law

    TURKISH LEADER RESISTS NIXING INSULT LAW
    By Jan Sliva, Associated Press Writer

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Oct 4 2007

    STRASBOURG, France -- Turkey's new president called Wednesday for
    changes to a law that makes it a crime to insult Turkish identity --
    legislation the European Union wants the country to scrap.

    Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk and slain ethnic Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink are among those prosecuted under the
    controversial law. But Turkey, though aspiring to join the EU, so
    far has resisted pressure to strike it from its legal code.

    "We know there are problems with regard to Article 301. There's
    still room for improvement and there are changes to be enacted in the
    period ahead," President Abdullah Gul told reporters at the Council
    of Europe. "I support the idea of Article 301 to change."

    Gul has said the law damages Turkey's image by portraying it as a
    country where intellectuals are jailed for speaking their opinion. On
    Wednesday, he lamented an "unfair perception" that people were
    imprisoned because of the law.

    "No one is going to prison for expressing their view freely,"
    he told with parliamentarians from the human rights watchdog's 47
    member states.

    Gul gave no timeframe for changes to the law but said the government
    is committed to improving its rights record -- an issue that has
    stymied Turkey's bid to join the 27-nation EU.

    Gul, formerly Turkey's foreign minister, said his country is more
    tolerant and democratic today than five years ago, when the country
    launched widespread social and judicial reforms.

    "All forms of discrimination are banned. Legal and constitutional
    guarantees on the right to association and assembly are reinforced.

    Cultural and religious rights have been upgraded," he said.

    Gul's visit the Strasbourg-based council is his first to western Europe
    since being elected president in August after months of controversy
    over his candidacy to a post traditionally held by a secularist. Gul
    is from an Islamist-rooted party.

    Also Wednesday, Gul warned against any territorial division of Iraq
    as proposed by the U.S. Senate.

    "One should not fall into the illusion that the current problems can
    be overcome by the partition of Iraq," he said. "This would be the
    worst scenario for the people of Iraq and the whole region."
Working...
X