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Journalists convicted of 'insulting Turkishness'

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  • Journalists convicted of 'insulting Turkishness'

    Journalists convicted of 'insulting Turkishness'

    By Vincent Boland in Ankara

    Published: October 11 2007 18:05 | Last updated: October 11 2007 18:05

    A court in Istanbul on Thursday handed down a one-year suspended jail
    sentence to two Turkish-Armenian journalists for "insulting
    Turkishness" a day after a US congressional decision to acknowledge
    the mass killings of Ottoman Armenians as genocide.

    Arat Dink and Serkis Seropyan, editors at the bilingual
    Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper Agos, were convicted for articles
    published referring to the massacres as genocide. They were convicted
    under article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which makes it a crime to
    criticise state institutions or challenge the official version of
    sensitive issues in Turkish history, including the Armenian massacres.

    Mr Dink is the son of Hrant Dink, the founder of Agos, who was
    murdered in Istanbul in January. A teenaged boy, who has admitted that
    he was the gunman, and 17 others are on trial for the murder, which
    sparked an unprecedented episode of soul-searching among Turks about
    their nation's responsibility for the plight of the Armenians.

    Hrant Dink was appealing at the time of his murder against a
    conviction for the same offence with which his son was charged. Aram
    Dink and Mr Seropyan are expected to appeal against Thursday's
    sentences.

    The verdict highlights the inconsistencies in Turkey's attitude
    towards the accusation of genocide against the Armenians as the
    Ottoman empire collapsed between 1915 and 1917. The government on
    Thursday strongly criticised the decision by the foreign affairs
    committee of the US House of Representatives to adopt a resolution
    declaring the massacres to be genocide but was itself criticised by
    some commentators for silencing debate on the issue inside Turkey.

    The Turkish Human Rights Association described the approach as a
    "discriminatory mentality" that "turns intolerance into a state
    policy".

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

    Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a55b5dea-7810-11dc-8e4c- 0000779fd2ac.html
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