Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Third Quarterly Media Monitoring Report: Full Text

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

  • ANKARA: Third Quarterly Media Monitoring Report: Full Text

    THIRD QUARTERLY MEDIA MONITORING REPORT: FULL TEXT
    Erol Onderoglu

    BÝA, Turkey
    Oct 30 2007

    The third quarterly report of the Bia Media Monitoring Desk has
    appeared, detailing violations of press freedom and the freedom of
    expression in the months of July, August and September 2007.

    According to the quarterly report of the Bia Media Monitoring Desk,
    relating to events in July, August and September 2007, 125 people,
    most of them journalists, and six media institutions have been tried
    for expressing their thoughts freely.

    This report lists the violations of the freedom of expression under
    seven headings:

    Murder, attacks and threats Detentions and arrests Trials and
    investigations Corrections and seeking legal redress European Court
    of Human Rights Reactions to censorship RTUK [Radio and Television
    Supreme Council] practices Murder, Attacks and Threats

    Two security officers who were involved in the taking of photos of
    O.S., the murder suspect of Agos editor Hrant Dink, together with
    gendarmerie and police in the tea room of the Samsun Department
    for Terrorism, are now on trial. At the first hearing at the fourth
    penal court in Samsun on 28 September, the defendants Metin Balta,
    the acting director of the Terrorism Department, and Ibrahim Firat,
    police officer at the department, did not attend. The hearing has
    been postponed until 2 November in order to take their statements and
    evaluate demands. Bahri Bayram Belen, a lawyer for the Dink family,
    has demanded that the court file of Balta and Firat be added to the
    murder case which is being heard at the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal
    court. Belen also requested that Hrant Dink's wife, daughter, son
    and brother be allowed to join the trial as third-party plaintiffs.

    When nationalist singer Ismail Turut and lyrics writer Arif Sirin
    (also known as "Bard Arif") gave statements about the song "Plan,
    don't make a plan" and the clip which was broadcast on You Tube using
    that song, Radikal reporter Serkan Ocak asked Turut: "Are those with
    you your body guards?" One of the men pointed his finger at Ocak and
    said, "Be careful". Turut called his entourage "my friends, my fans."

    In the Objektif programme on Fox TV, broadcast on 20 September, Sirin
    continued to threaten journalist Ali Bayramoglu of the Yeni Safak
    newspaper, who had first written about the song and the video clip.

    He said: "I was surprised at Ali Bayramoglu's approach in this
    matter. What is such a writer doing in such a climate? This community
    needs to examine this writer carefully." Bayramoglu had previously
    been threatened after publishing an article entitled "Our Life is in
    Danger" on 4 July, in which he pointed out the importance of solving
    the Hrant Dink murder. He received an email message saying, "If you
    continue to write like that, you will end like Hrant Dink". The matter
    has been taken to the prosecution.

    Lawyers of the Dink family have appealed against the decision of the
    Trabzon Governor's Office not to allow the investigation of Ramazan
    Akyurek, the head of the Intelligence Unit at the Police Department,
    Resat Altay, former police chief in Trabzon, and police officers
    Engin Dinc, Faruk Sari, Ercan Demir, Ozkan Mumcu, Muhittin Zenit and
    Mehmet Ayhan. The governor's office is basing its refusal on a report
    by investigators of the Ministry of the Interior who had prepared
    a report.

    Kasim Ciftci, the owner of the "Hakkari Province Voice" newspaper
    died on the evening of 22 September after being shot by one or more
    unknown persons. The murder was condemned by the Van Lake Journalists'
    Society, the former Hakkari mayor and Abdurrahman Keskin, owner of
    Hakkari's "The People's Voice" newspaper. It is not clear yet whether
    he died because of activities relating to press freedom or the freedom
    of expression.

    "Radikal" journalist Turker Alkan wrote that he used to receive threats
    before 28 February 1997, a date commonly remembered as a "postmodern
    coup" in Turkey. He said that threats by email had resumed since the
    general elections of 22 July. Writing on 6 September, Alkan said:
    "After 22 July, angry and threatening communications have again shown
    themselves. In a recently received communication, someone claiming to
    be a police officer said that I was a 'traitor' and that s/he would
    'shoot into my head twice.'" Alkan added, "Who knows, was that person
    really a police officer? But even if s/he was not, what do you think
    it means that someone with such a mentality has appropriated the role
    of police officer?"

    Prime Minister Erdogan criticised "Hurriyet" columnist Bekir
    Coskun heavily for writing about Abdullah Gul, "He Will Not Be My
    President". In the Arena programme of Kanal D, which Erdogan attended
    on 20 August, he responded to the column by saying: "Unfortunately
    there are those who do not know propriety. Those who say such things
    should first give up their citizenship of the Turkish Republic." In
    his editorial comment, Oktay Eksi of the "Hurriyet" newspaper then
    replied: "The honourable Prime Minster has to be asked by someone:
    'Are you kicking Bekir Coskun off your father's farm?" Orhan Erinc,
    president of the Turkish Journalists' Society (TGC) evaluated the PM's
    comments as "unfortunate and misplaced". Prime Ministerial spokesperson
    Akif Beki replied that the Prime Minister had not criticised Coskun,
    but the attempts at making the issue [of the presidential elections]
    personal.

    Reporter Ahmet Un of the local "Kulp News" newspaper in Diyarbakir
    filed a criminal complaint in August, saying that he has been receiving
    death threats and insults from mayor Mahmut Zengin after criticising
    him for not solving a water problem which was causing illnesses.

    The "Tunceli Emek" (Labour) newspaper, which had reported that a
    petrol tanker belonging to the state-run village services had emptied
    its petrol into the petrol station of former mayor Hasan Korkmaz,
    was subsequently visited by a man called Hasan Cakici on 3 August. He
    threatened newspaper employees. It has been said that after he was
    removed from the office with the help of others, Hasan Korkmaz's
    brother came to the office and hurled threats.

    Aris Nalci, the news editor of the weekly Turkish-Armenian "Agos"
    newspaper has said that although there has been a decrease in email
    threats, they do continue. High school student R.D. was arrested on
    2 August for sending the newspaper a threatening email one day after
    editor-in-chief Hrant Dink's murder. In his first statement R.D. said,
    "I sent that message in a moment of ignorance." He was then sent to
    Bayrampasa prison in Istanbul.

    Sinan Tekpetek, journalist and editor for the "Ozgur Hayat" (Free
    Life) newspaper and the "yuzde 52 Ofke" (52 percent Anger) magazine,
    has stated that he was forcibly taken away by a police car in Taksim
    (central Istanbul) on the evening of 26 July, brought to a desolate
    place, continuously exposed to insults, death threats and violence,
    and then thrown out of the police car near Karakoy. The international
    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) reacted to the incident by saying:
    "It is not clear yet whether the journalist was exposed to violence
    because of his professional activities as a journalist or because of
    a court case related to his objection to police violence." In a press
    statement which he read at the Istanbul branch of the Human Rights
    Association (IHD), Tekpetek said that he did not know the reason for
    the attack, but that it may either be the activities of the magazine or
    a court case opened against him after he had witnessed police violence
    in 2005. Tekpetek gave a statement to prosecutor Enver Dikilitas on
    31 July.

    The daily "Bolge" (Region) newspaper in Adana was attacked by a group
    for writing that those who "made efforts to ensure that no one voted
    for the CHP (Republican People's Party) thus did not have the right
    to criticise the CHP". Around 20 people came to the newspaper office
    to speak to editor-in-chief Nevzat Ucak. They reacted to an article
    published on 29 July, which said that "the gathering in front of
    the head office was a fiasco" and to an article criticising them
    as "The Children of Soros" on 30 July. The CHP opponents insulted
    newspaper employees and when they reacted, the intruders harrassed them
    further. Ucak said, "We wrote that those who had said 'Do not vote
    for the CHP' and who had hung up posters, put adverts in newspapers
    and had generally worked towards that goal, did not have the right to
    call for CHP chair Baykal's resignation; they stormed our office." The
    Cukurova Journalists' Society condemned the attack with a statement.

    On 13 July, the Professional News Camerapersons' Association
    condemned the physical attack by AKP supporters on the news group
    of the Kanalturk channel when filming an election campaign with 500
    cycling children in Ankara. Cameras were broken and film cassettes
    confiscated. Reporter Duygu Kayacik and cameraman Mujdat Genc were
    targeted, too. In its statement, the association said: "We demand
    that those responsible for the attack on democracy and free publishing
    during the election campaign, one of the greatest gains of democracy,
    be brought to trial."

    On 13 July, lawyers of the Dink family appealed against the decision
    of the Samsun Public Prosecution to dismiss proceedings against police
    and gendarmerie officers who formed close relationships with Hrant
    Dink's murder suspect O.S. after his arrest.

    In the Hrant Dink murder trial, joint attorneys appealed against
    the decision of the court to release four of the eighteen detained
    suspects, Salih Hacisalihoglu, Osman Alpay, Irfan Ozkan and Veysel
    Toprak, from detention at the first hearing of the case on 2 July. In
    the appeal to the 9th Heavy Penal Court in Istanbul, it said: "Basic
    and critical issues which are needed to shed light on this case are
    to be found in the actions of the released suspects."

    The international Reporters Without Borders (RSF) reacted to a report
    by the Police Department, which said that the murder of journalist
    Hrant Dink was organised by "a group based on friendship". RSF said,
    "This report is attempting to clear the security forces. The question
    that really needs to be answered is why the warnings of Erhan Tuncel
    were ignored. The police said that ties with Tuncel were cut in
    November 2006, but he said at the hearing, 'I told the police that
    an attack against Hrant Dink would be organised.'"

    In a press briefing on 3 July, one day after the first hearing in the
    Hrant Dink murder trial, lawyer Fethiye Cetin called for the trial
    of all the gendarmerie and police officers whose relations with the
    murder suspects have emerged, and who did not prevent the murder
    despite knowing about it. Cetin cited Article 83 of the Penal Code,
    which deals with "related crimes", and demanded that these officers
    be tried as part of the murder case.

    At the first hearing of the Hrant Dink murder trial at the Istanbul
    14th Heavy Penal Court, the release of detained defendants Salih
    Hacisalihoglu, Osman Altay, Irfan Ozkan and Veysel Toprak was
    decided. Defendant O.S., tried for being the suspected gunman, used his
    right to silence. Erhan Tuncel, tried for incitement to murder, said:
    "I served the state. I do not know why I am here." Defendant Yasin
    Hayal said: "Tuncel deceived us. He planned the murder. It was him who
    built the bomb that was thrown at Mc Donald's [in an earlier incident
    in Trabzon]." The first hearing lasted all day. All eighteen defendants
    were questioned and the demands of the defense and the joint attorneys
    were listened to. Requests of both sides to widen the investigation
    were accepted. The court case was to continue on 1 October.

    Detentions and Arrests

    Idris Akboga, the editor of the "Ozgur Halk" (Free People) magazine,
    was arrested when he went to the Istanbul 11th Heavy Penal Court
    on 26 September in order to give a statement on the September issue
    of the magazine. He was sent to Bayrampasa prison in Istanbul. The
    court has accused Akboga of "praising crimes and criminals", of
    "printing and publishing texts of a terrorist organisation", of
    "committing a crime by helping members of a terrorist organisation
    or spreading propaganda."

    Fusun Erdogan, the general broadcast coordinator of "Ozgur Radyo"
    (Free Radio), who had been arrested together with 22 other people
    in an operation targeting members of the Marxist Leninist Communist
    Party (MLKP) on 12 September 2006, is to appear at the Istanbul 10th
    Heavy Penal Court on 26 October for the first time. Others accused of
    relations with the organisation are Atilim newspaper editor Ibrahim
    Cicek, who is being held in an F-type prison in Tekirdag, and Atilim
    publishing coordinator Sedat Senoglu, being held in an F-type prison in
    Edirne, former Atilim editor Ziya Ulusoy and Atilim journalist Bayram
    Namaz. In the 292-page indictment prepared by Public Prosecutor Ali
    Cengiz Haciosmanoglu, prison sentences ranging from 10.5 to 45 years
    are being demanded.

    Durmus Sahin, a student of the Ankara Gazi University Education
    Faculty, was arrested on 11 July when he refused to shake hands with
    Minister for Health Recep Akdag. Sahin had said, "I do not shake
    hands with those in government who do not provide services to the
    citizens". After five days detention, he was brought before the Olur
    Criminal Court of Peace. There Sahin said, "Although I did not want
    to shake hands, the minister persisted in wanting tos hake my hands.

    Because I did not give my hand, he sent me to prison." Sahin was
    released from detention but will be tried. A prison sentence from
    six months to two years is being demanded.

    Mehmet Cevizci, reporter for the Dicle News Agency, who was taking part
    in a news workshop organised by Press Now and the IPS Communications
    Foundation, was arrested by gendarmerie coming to his room at the
    Mavi Gol hotel at 5am. He was released at around 2pm after giving a
    statement. Cevizci said that he had been arrested at a protest against
    "criminal gangs and prostitution", which ended in disturbances after
    a banner saying "Amed [the Kurdish name for Diyarbakir] is honour,
    protect your honour" was opened. Cevizci was being searched for
    since then.

    Issues of the weekly "Coban Atesi" (Shepherd's Fire) newspaper
    in Gaziantep were collected and confiscated after an article in
    the issue of 3 August 2007 said, "Antep is an industrial city in
    Northern Kurdistan." A week later, Yasin Yetisgen, owner and editor
    of the newspaper, was arrested when he went to the Gaziantep 1st
    Peace Court of First Instance to give a statement regarding the
    notification of the confiscation. The newspaper's publishing board
    said in a statement: "Our newspaper, which supports real freedom of
    expression, will continue its struggle against all kind of legal,
    administrative and political decisions and practices which mean an
    attack on the freedoms of thought and expression." The board also
    protested against the "precautionary arrest" of Yetisgen. Yetisgen
    was released after three weeks in detention. There has been an arrest
    warrant issued for writer Hursit Kasikkirmaz of the same newspaper.

    Four people who had been in detention for more than 10 months after the
    "Gaye" operation targeting the Marxist Leninist Communist Party (MLKP)
    in 21 September 2006 were released on 7 August. One of them is Emin
    Orhan, the editor of the "Dayanisma" (Solidarity) newspaper. The case,
    in which 32 people, nine of them still in detention, are being tried
    for "membership in an organisation", will continue on 6 December. The
    Istanbul 9th Heavy Penal Court decided to continue the detentions
    of Yusuf Demir, Yunus Aydemir, Erdal Demirhan, Ali Haydar Keles and
    Gunes Senyuz.

    Sait Bayram and Firat Avci, the news editor and reporter of
    Diyarbakir-based "Soz TV and Newspaper" were arrested after claiming
    that judge Mehmet Yucel Kurtoglu was transferred because he had
    been taking bribes. The two reporters were released a month later,
    on 20 July. They had been sent to Diyarbakir's Closed Prison under the
    charge of "insulting through the press". The relevant article had been
    published on 18 June 2007. The court case will continue on 31 October.

    Sinan Kara, the owner of the "Datca News" newspaper was arrested
    when preparing a book about the city of Batman and its environs. He
    was arrested on 3 February under the charge of "insulting through the
    press". He was released on 3 July, after spending more than four months
    in an M-type prison in Batman, and then 20 days in a prison in Mugla.

    Trials and Investigations

    The trial of Rojda Kizgin, reporter for the Dicle News Agency (DIHA),
    Ridvan Kizgin, former branch president of the Human Rights Assocation
    (IHD) and Dogan Adibelli will continue on 30 October. Adibelli had
    claimed that village guards were using government bombs to hunt fish,
    and this was reported by DIHA. The defendants are being tried under
    Article 301/2, for "degrading the state's military and security
    forces".

    Emin Karaca, journalist for the "Yazin" magazine in Turkey and Europe,
    had criticised the army for the execution of student revolutionary
    leaders Deniz Gezmis, Yusuf Aslan and Huseyin Inan on the anniversary
    of their execution. The Supreme Court of Appeals has ruled that
    Karaca be retried under Article 301/2, and the trial continues on 3
    October. In September 2005 he was given a five-month prison sentence
    which was then converted into a 900 YTL fine. The sentence was then
    overruled for a technical reason (a missing signature) and wil now
    continue at the 2nd Penal Court in Istanbul.

    The case which retired ambassador and MP for the Republican People's
    Party (CHP) M. Sukru Elekdag initiated against Publisher Muzaffer
    Erdogdu for the publication of a book entitled "The Treatment of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915-1916: Documents Presented to
    Fallodon Viscount Grey by Viscount Bryce" continues at the Ankara 6th
    Civil Court of First Instance. Elekdag is demanding compensation of
    20,000 YTL. The book, which was published in November 2005, has also
    caused the trial of translator Ahmet Guner and historian Taner Akcam.

    Akcam is further being tried for an article in the "Birikim" journal.

    The trial will continue on 8 November.

    Abdurrahman Dilipak and Mehmet Ozcan, journalist and editor of the
    "Akit" newspaper respectively, are still on trial at the Bagcilar
    2nd Penal Court (Istanbul) for an article entitled "My Country is
    Something Else" and published on 27 April 2001. The two defendants
    are on trial for "inciting the public to hatred and hostility". The
    trial will continue on 20 November.

    It has been decided to continue four trials against DTP Batman MP
    Aysel Tugluk for "spreading propaganda for a terrorist organisation".

    The cases were heard at the Istanbul 13th Heavy Penal Court on 20
    September. Tugluk did not attend, but her lawyer Ozcan Kilic demanded
    that the court consider Tugluk's immunity (due to her status as a
    parliamentarian). The court has cited Article 14 of the constitution
    which foresees that "basic rights and freedoms are not abused" and
    decided to continue. Up to five years imprisonment are being demanded.

    Singer Ferhat Tunc has been on trial for around three years for an
    article entitled "A Revolutionary Leyla and a Song", published in the
    "Yeniden Gundem" newspaper on 19 January 2004. He has been charged
    with "degrading and ridiculing the court". In the article, he had
    criticised the detention and trial of Leyla Zana and the former DEP
    MPs. Up to three years imprisonment are being demanded. The trial is
    to continue on 13 December at the Beyoglu 2nd Penal Court (Istanbul)
    and the newspaper's responsible editor Mehmet Colak, who lives abroad,
    is also being tried.

    In the trial against Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal, who have been
    accused of "degrading Turkishness and inciting hatred and hostility"
    and "illegally collecting data" with Protestant missionary activity,
    there has been a change of court. Following a complaint of lawyer
    Kemal Kerincsiz and others from the Great Lawyers' Union about the
    judge, the case has been transferred to the Silivri 1st Penal Court.

    At the hearing on 26 September, the demand of Sevgi Erenol, press
    spokesperson of the Turkish Orthodox Church, to join the trial as a
    third party was denied. The case will be continued on 29 November.

    Prosecutor Demirhuyuk, who was in charge of the case before, had said
    on 18 July, "The right to live and spread the religion one wants is
    protected by the constitution and our laws in terms of the freedom
    of religion and conscience."

    The case against the Belge Publications for translating and publishing
    Prof. Dr. Dora Sakayan's "An Armenian in Turkey" (The Memoirs of
    Garabet Haceryan) and George Jerjian's "The Truth Will Set Us Free"
    will continue on 3 October. Because the court cannot reach Jerjian,
    publisher Ragip Zarakolu is on trial instead. For Sakayan's book,
    both Zarakolu and translator Atilla Tuygan are on trial.

    Zarakolu faces up to 7.5 years imprisonment demanded for "degrading
    and ridiculing the State and the Republic" and "insulting the memory
    of Ataturk". Tuygan faces six years imprisonment for "degrading and
    ridiculing the army".

    Prime Minister Erdogan lost his court case against "Cumhuriyet"
    writer Ilhan Selcuk, who had written an article entitled "There is
    No Language Particular to the Reactionary" published on 6 May 2007.

    Selcuk had written "The worst thing was how the reactionary gang who
    spoke in the name of the Supreme Allah, the Holy Prophet and the
    Holy Qu'ran became wild when they had come to power." Erdogan had
    demanded 20,000 YTL compensation, but judge Ahmet Metin Tozun at an
    Ankara court decreed that there was no criminal element in the words.

    "The state made mistakes. When and where? Yesterday, in the East and
    South-East. then in Istanbul. In Maras and Sivas. Today in Trabzon,
    Istanbul, Mersin and in the South-East," said journalist Haci
    Bogatekin, and had to face court again on 26 September. Because he
    criticised state policies in an article entitled "Turkey Has Made
    Mistakes", published in his newspaper on 10 March 2007, he is on
    trial for "degrading Turkishness, the Republic, state institutions
    or its organs" (Article 301). The case will continue on 6 November.

    On 21 September, the Kocaeli 2nd Penal Court punished caricaturist
    Muhammet Sengoz to 11 months and 20 days imprisonment for a caricature
    entitled "Who's next, Mayor?" published in the "Free Kocaeli"
    newspaper. The sentence was converted into a 7,000 YTL fine.

    The prosecutor had called for an acquittal, but nevertheless, Sengoz
    was sentenced in the case brought by mayor Ibrahim Karaosmanoglu.

    Sengoz had reacted to billboards which Karaosmanoglu had put up
    around the city which praised his achievements. A constant theme on
    the billboards was a person asking, "What's next, Mayor?" In Sengoz's
    caricature, a man with his back to the reader and with his trousers
    down is asking, "Who's next, Mayor?"

    Umut Karakoyun, owner of the local "Tunceli Emek" newspaper in Tunceli,
    eastern Anatolia, was being tried under Article 301 for accusing the
    judiciary of bias. Karakoyun has claimed that the Tunceli governor's
    office obstructed advertisements in an arbitrary manner and had written
    about the governor's press and PR manager Elif Polat. Karakoyun is
    also accused of "insulting a public officer through the media". On
    21 September, the Tunceli Penal Court acquitted him on both accounts.

    Sinan Kara, a journalist who has been imprisoned three times before,
    was acquitted in a trial under Article 301, concerning an article he
    wrote in which he joined EU Commission Turkey representative Hans
    Jorg Kretschmer's criticism of the army. The article was entitled
    "Barracks Party". At the hearing on 20 September, the Beyoglu 2nd
    Penal Court acquitted him. He is also on trial under Article 301/2
    for an article entitled "Justice has become Militarism's Jester",
    published in the "Social Democracy" (Toplumsal Demokrasi) newspaper
    on 20 November 2006. He will face court again on 26 October. Kara is
    also on trial for an article entitled "Full-time killers", in which
    he criticised the state and the army in relation to a bombing in
    Diyarbakir in which 10 people died, eight of them children. Again,
    Article 301 has been cited, and the case will start on 26 October.

    Finally, Kara will face the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court on 30
    January 2008 for an article entitled "Isolation Knows No Limits",
    writing about isolation cells in prisons. The article was published in
    the "Ulkede Ozgur Gundem" newspaper on 14 November 2006. In addition,
    the "Ulkede Ozgur Gundem" newspaper's responsible editor Ozlem Aktan
    and writer Mustafa Temizkan are on trial for "praising a criminal"
    after an article referred to imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan as
    "the leader of the Kurdish People".

    Retired judge Zekeriya Dilsizoglu is demanding 100,000 YTL
    compensation from editor Nurgul Balcioglu of the "Gaziantep Sabah
    newspaper. Balcioglu had criticised the judge's claim that "In nine out
    of ten murders, a woman is involved". The case began on 14 September
    at the Bakirkoy 8th Penal Court (Istanbul) and will continue on
    29 November.

    A case against "Nokta" magazine editor Alper Gormus began on 19
    September. The trial is related to the publication of parts of
    retired Navy Commander General Ozden Ornek's diaries. On 29 March,
    the magazine had published an article entitled "Sarikiz and Ayisigi
    in Suprising Detail. We had a narrow escape from two military coups
    in 2004!" Following a complaint by Ornek, Gormus is now on trial. The
    case will continue on 29 February 2008 and up to six years and eight
    months imprisonment are being demanded.

    Dink family lawyer Erdal Dogan is on trial for saying that "Hrant was
    particularly worried about Veli Kucuk getting involved in his trial".

    Veli Kucuk, a retired brigadier general who is infamous in Turkey for
    his involvement in the "deep state", is said to have threatened Dink.

    There is no investigation against Veli Kucuk. Kucuk is deamnding
    10,000 YTL compensation for being portrayed as a "murderer" and for
    being accused without justification. At the hearing on 18 September,
    the Beyoglu 4th Penal Court requested more evidence from both sides.

    The trial will continue on 22 November.

    Yasin Yetisgen, owner and responsible director of the weekly "Coban
    Atesi" (Shepherd's Fire) newspaper in Gaziantep, south-eastern Turkey,
    is on trial under Article 216/1 of the Turkish Penal Code.

    Yetisgen, and the writer of the article, Hursit Kasikkirmaz, are
    charged with "inciting hatred and hostility". The case is based on
    the controversial use of the term "Kurdistan" in the sentence "With a
    population of 2 million, Antep is the biggest metropoloe in Northern
    Kurdistan". The case will begin on 4 October at the Gaziantep 10th
    Penal Court.

    Prof. Dr. Ibrahim Kaboglu and Prof. Dr. Baskin Oran had been on trial
    under Article 216/1 for the writing of the report of the Minority
    Rights and Cultural Rights Working Group. The two academics had
    suggested the term "citizenship of Turkey" (or literally "Turkey-ness",
    in Turkish "Turkiyelik") as a super-identity in their report. Since
    14 November 2005 they have been on trial, with a sentence of between
    1.5 and 4.5 years being demanded. An Ankara Penal Court had aquitted
    the two academics of "inciting hatred and hostility" on 10 May, but,
    following the appeal of Ankara Public Prosecutor Huseyin Boyrazoglu,
    the supreme court overturned this decree. On 13 September, the 8th
    Penal Department of the Court of Appeals decreed that "a new definition
    of minority will endanger the unitary state and the inseparability
    of the nation".

    A Recep Akkus and an Asim Demir have filed a criminal complaint against
    the "Radikal" newspaper for translating two articles into Turkish
    and publishing them. The articles in question are "New Evidence of
    Armenian Genocide" by the experienced Middle East correspondent Robert
    Fisk from the "Independent" newspaper and "How Sincere is the 'Never
    Again' Slogan?" by Jeff Jacoby from the "Boston Globe". Radikal's
    responsible editor Hasan Cakkalkurt may face a trial under Article 301
    for "degrading Turkishness". The complaint is still being investigated.

    Fuat Turgut, the defense lawyer of Yasin Hayal, a suspect in the Hrant
    Dink murder trial, is demanding a total of 20,000 YTL compensation
    from "Radikal" columnist Perihan Magden, "Birgun" journalist Ahmet
    Tulgar and Dink family lawyer Erdal Dogan. The trial was opened on 12
    September. In an article published on 5 July 2007, Magden had described
    Turgut as a "freak showman". On the same day, Tulgar wrote of him as
    "mad and showy".

    The case of DTP Batman PM Aysel Tugluk and the party's former Siirt
    Province chair Murat Avci continued on 11 September. They are on trial
    for a statement they made - on World Peace Day. Tugluk is accused
    of "spreading terrorist propaganda". The Diyarbakir 4th Heavy Penal
    Court has decided to request an official statement regarding Tugluk's
    parliamentarian status. The court has further decreed that if Avci,
    who has not attended hearings, does not appear in court by 13 November,
    which is the next hearing, he will be brought forcibly.

    Tugluk is also being tried for a speech she made in Batman last year.

    Article 7/2 of the Anti-Terrorism Law has been cited and up to five
    years imprisonment are being demanded. The next hearing in this case
    is 25 October.

    The trial against 56 mayors who had written to Danish Prime Minister
    Anders Fogh Rasmussen in 2005 in order to persuade him not to close
    down Roj TV has had to be postponed awaiting the answer of Denmark's
    media secretary. On 11 September, the Diyarbakir 5th Heavy Penal Court
    demanded an original English text on the situation concerning Roj TV
    for the second time. The trial will continue on 20 November.

    The 56 mayors, 54 of whom are from the pro-Kurdish DTP, and two from
    the Social Democratic People's Party (SHP), are being accused of
    "knowingly and willingly aiding a terrorist organisation" by "trying
    to prevent the loss of a visual propaganda medium of the terrorist
    organisation". The prosecution has demanded the acquittal of three
    and prison sentences ranging from 7.5 to 15 years for the other 53.

    They are being tried under Articles 314/3 and 220/7 of the Turkish
    Penal Code.

    Hikmet Erden, reporter for the Dicle News Agency (DIHA) is being tried
    for claiming that soldiers were trying to prevent people from voting
    for the "A thousand hope" candidates supported by the pro-Kurdish
    DTP party in the Karacadag region of Diyarbakir.

    Following a criminal complaint by the gendarmerie, the Diyarbakir
    Public Prosecution has opened a trial against Erden for "spreading
    slander in the press", citing Article 267 of Law 5237 of the Penal
    Code and demanding between one and four years in prison. The case
    will start at the Diyarbakir 2nd Penal Court on 2 February 2008.

    Emin Bal, reporter for the Dogan News Agency and the "Sirnak News"
    newspaper, filed a complaint against police officers for hitting him
    at the same time as they claimed the same about him. Bal has been to
    court eight times for "hitting three police officers" a year ago. On
    the other hand, no trial has been opened against the police officers,
    whom Bal claims hit him. Bal had a medical report saying that he was
    unfit to work for six days. The journalist's lawyer Mucahit Dursun
    said, "Although we filed criminal complaints on the same date, the
    case against my client has nearly been decided. Our complaint against
    the police however, is still waiting at the prosecutor's office. The
    case against Bal will continue on 4 October. Bal claims that he was
    arrested and beaten by police officers on 10 October 2006 when he
    went to court to research a court case.

    Singer Ferhat Tunc is being tried for saying at a concert in Antalya's
    Alanya district on 22 July 2006: "Just as every soldier who dies in
    this country is a child of this country, every guerilla who is killed
    is this country's child." Tunc will appear at the Izmir 10th Heavy
    Penal Court on 4 October. He is being tried under Article 7/2 of the
    Anti-Terrorism Law and five years imprisonment are being demanded.

    Yucel Sayman, former president of the Istanbul Bar Association, who
    accused Kemal Kerincsiz's lawyers of influencing the judiciary at
    the first hearing in the trial against journalists from the "Agos"
    newspaper, is being tried for insulting those same lawyers. The
    hearing in question was on 10 May 2006, when editor-in-chief Hrant
    Dink, editor Arat Dink and licence holder Serkis Seropyan were
    being tried. Following a complaint by Kerincsiz, Sayman will have
    to appear at the Sisli Penal Court in February 2008. Article 125 of
    the Penal Code is being cited, and up to two years imprisonment are
    being demanded.

    Cagri Karadag and Kemal Bozkurt, the owner and editor-in-chief of
    the "Revolution is the Only Way Movement" magazine were acquitted at
    a hearing at the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court on 31 August. The
    trial had been opened because of two articles entitled "The Kurds
    are my brothers and the people in E-type prisons are your children"
    and "1 September World Peace Day". The articles were published in
    the eighth issue of the magazine in September and October 2004,
    and the two journalists had been on trial under Article 7/2 of
    the Anti-Terrorism Law. In the first article it had said: "As those
    resisting become isolated, attacks increase. Let us unite our forces in
    order to create an effective resistance against the brutal attacks on
    the Kurdish movement, the systematic attacks on the revolutionaries
    and the torture." Bozkurt is furthermore on trial for an article
    about Mahir Cayan, a student revolutionary leader of the 1960s,
    and his friends. He is accused of "praising a crime and criminals"
    and will be tried on 18 October at the Istanbul 2nd Penal Court.

    Ozgur Ulas Kaplan, the president of the Tunceli Bar Association,
    and Huseyin Tunc, the province chair of the Labour Party (EMEP) were
    on trial under Article 7/2 of the Anti-Terrorism Law for opposing
    military operations in a programme broadcast by Roj TV. They were
    acquitted on 16 August. Kaplan and Tunc said that they made a press
    statement at the Tunceli Municipality conference room together with
    political party representatives and municipality officials at the end
    of 2006. After the statement, a Roj TV reporter connected with them
    by phone and they told the TV channel that operations needed to stop.

    On 13 August it emerged that the General Staff filed a criminal
    complaint against "Sabah" newspaper's columnist Umur Talu for
    an article published on 12 June 2007 and entitled, "Are these
    impossible?" Article 95/4 of the Military Penal Code has been
    cited and a sentence ranging from six months to three years is
    being demanded. The legal article also envisages an increment in the
    sentence because a published text is concerned. Talu is being accused
    of "acting in an insulting and derisive manner aimed at undermining
    relations between junior and senior officers and destroying the trust
    in superiors or commanders". Talu gave a statement to the Press
    Prosecutor Ismail Onaran in Istanbul on 7 August. Talu's article,
    which expressed common complaints of lower ranking soldiers, included
    a call for "human treatment when alive for noncommissioned officers
    and the totally excluded sergeants by the high-ranking officers who
    attend their funerals", as well as "their admission to army leisure
    centres". The Initiative against The Crime of Thought has protested
    against Talu's prosecution, saying, "Civilians are still being tried
    by Military Penal Law, which is incongruous with the promises made
    in the EU reform packages."

    Mustafa Koyuncu, the responsible director of the local "Emirdag"
    newspaper in Afyonkarahisar has been accused of insulting local
    authorities in the press. He was arrested on 13 March and held for
    a week. His trial, now without detention, will continue on 3 October.

    In the 12 March 2007 issue of the newspaper, Koyuncu had criticised
    the police in Emirdag in an article entitled "Should We Enter the
    EU Like This? They Are Abusing Their Positions". The article quotes
    claims from people who had been arrested in Emirdag. The journalist
    was stopped when driving and arrested. 44 police officers have filed
    complaints against him.

    Nurdan Acur, the Human Resources Manager of the Merkez Newspaper
    Magazine Group, is suing the publishing companies of three
    news websites, www.superpoligon.com, www.celiknet.com, and
    www.haberciler.com, for 6,000 YTL compensation. The websites had
    reported on the suit which the Turkey Journalists' Syndicate (TGS)
    has filed against Acur for pressurising trade union members to resign
    from the trade union. She is said to have handed out pre-prepared Trade
    Union Resignation Forms to employees of the Merkez Newspaper Magazine
    Press Publishing Company, whether they were members of the trade union
    or not. Acur said in her complaint of 25 July that her personal rights
    had been attacked. The editor-in-chief of the website Gercekgundem
    (Real agenda), Baris Yarkadas was told on 12 August to attend the
    hearing at the Sisli 1st Court of First Instance on 21 November.

    On 9 August, "Hurriyet" newspaper's reporter Sebati Karakurt was told
    by the Istanbul 10th Heavy Penal Court to pay a preliminary fine of 455
    YTL. Karakurt is being tried for a feature on the Kongra-Gel (popularly
    still known as the PKK) miltiants on the Qandil mountain in Northern
    Iraq. Responsible editors Hasan Kilic and Necdet Tatlican have been
    sentenced to pay 40,000 YTL and 20,000 YTL fines respectively. The
    feature had been published under the title "In Kandil feminism
    has gone beyond Kurdish nationalism" on 10 October 2004. Karakurt
    and Kilic are accused of "spreading the statements of a terrorist
    organisation". Should the fines not be paid, the court case will
    continue on 13 November with a possibility of prison sentences.

    On 8 August, the prosecution in Sarkoy (province of Tekirdag in Thrace)
    demanded ten years imprisonment for journalist Yakup Onal of the local
    "Sarkoy'un Sesi" ("The Voice of Sarkoy) newspaper for insulting mayor
    Can Gursoy of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and two municipal
    council members, Olcay Yucel and Ercan Yucel. The case will continue on
    31 October. The case had initially been handled by prosecutor Tamer
    Soysal. On his transferal to Diyarbakir, the case had been taken
    over by prosecutor Huseyin Kocaslan. Soysal had appealed against the
    acquittal of the journalist in an earlier case (14 March), related to
    an article entitled, "Beer drinkers in blue-flagged Sarkoy, beware!" In
    that case, Onal had been on trial for "violating the secrecy of an
    investigation" and "attempting to influence the judiciary".

    The Bagcilar Prosecution conducted investigations into "Radikal"
    newspaper's columnists Perihan Magden and Yildirim Turker at
    the beginning of August. Prosecutor Ali Cakir conducted a formal
    investigation into Magden after she wrote an article entitled "Tonight
    your paint is everywhere, state", but dismissed proceedings on 29
    June. Magden had criticised the ban on news coverage of the weapons
    Arsenal found in a home in Umraniye (Istanbul) in her article. Magden
    was also investigated for "harming the public image of the military"
    in the same article. Following a complaint by a Recep Akkus, there
    is also an investigation against Turker under Article 301/2 for
    "degrading the state's armed forces". The investigation is related to
    an article entitled "Invisible Attack", published on 8 July 2007 in
    the Radikal supplement. Turker had written about the process which
    led to Hrant Dink's murder, including the indifference of media and
    state authorities in the face of racism.

    On 3 August it was reported that the Supreme Court of Appeals ratified
    the decision of the Sisli Penal Court to drop its case against writer
    Orhan Pamuk. Pamuk had been on trial under Article 159 of the old
    Penal Code after saying in an interview with weekly Swiss magazine
    "Das Magazin" that "One million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds have been
    killed on this soil". Up to three years imprisonment had been demanded,
    but when the Ministry of Justice had refused permission for trial,
    the Sisli court had dropped the case.

    On demand of the Ministry of the Interior, Mayor Abdullah Demirbas
    of the Sur municipality in Diyarbakir lost his post in June and the
    municipal council was dissolved. The Sur municipality had offered
    its services in Kurdish and Arabic as well as Turkish. Now the 8th
    Chamber of the State Council has opened a case against Demirbas and
    council members for "abusing their position" and "violating the law
    on insurgency". In the indictment, prison sentences ranging between
    one and three and a half years are demanded for the council members
    deciding on the multilingual services and Osman Baydemir, the mayor
    of Greater Diyarbakir. A total of 21 persons will be tried at the
    Diyarbakir 2nd Penal Court on 7 November for "abusing their position"
    and "violating the law on Turkish letters". Demirbas has been acquitted
    in another case concerning an article entitled "Local Government in
    Light of Multilingual Municipal Services" which he had presented to
    the European Social Forum.

    At the end of July, the Ankara 13th Civil Court of First Instance
    partially accepted the complaint of a Sukru Elekdag against "Agos"
    writer and historian Taner Akcam and decreed that Akcam should pay
    compensation. Akcam had written an article entitled "Gunduz Aktan and
    the Saik Issue in the Genocide" and it was published in the weekly
    newspaper on 6, 20 and 27 January and 3, 10, 17 February 2006.

    Elekdag, an MP, had claimed that his personal rights were attacked
    and he was insulted. He had demanded 20,000 YTL compensation. It was
    decided that Akcam and the newspaper should pay 10,000 YTL and legal
    interest. Lawyers have appealed against the decision, arguing that
    it violates the European Convention on Human Rights.

    After saying in a speech, "We will count an attack on Kerkuk as
    an attack on Diyarbakir", DTP province chair Hilmi Aydogdu was
    detained for one and a half months. Since 5 April, he has been on
    trial without detention. The court has listened to journalists who
    interviews Aydogdu and it has been decided that local journalist
    Abdulselam Tayfun's statement also be taken. Now the Diyarbakir 8th
    Penal Court is going to evaluate CD recordings. At a hearing on 26
    July, Aydogdu's lawyer Hayrettin Guzel had been given time to examine
    the analysis of the recording. Aydogdu is being tried under Article
    216/1 of the old Penal Code for "inciting the public to hatred and
    hostility" and up to 4.5 years imprisonment are being demanded. The
    case will continue on 2 October.

    Lawyer Ferhat Bayindir had taken on the case of Hasin Is, who had been
    killed in front of the Batman Municipality building two years ago,
    on 27 August 2005. Bayindir himself was put on trial after a press
    statement he made on 16 June 2005. He was accused of "insulting the
    police force". The case will continue at the Batman Heavy Penal Court
    on 4 October.

    In the case against Diyarbakir mayor Osman Baydemir, the expert
    report has been questioned. Baydemir is said to have told the "Tempo"
    magazine in an interview that "Turks and Kurds cannot live together".

    On 24 July the Bagcilar 2nd Penal Court (Istanbul) accepted Baydemir's
    lawyer Ozcan Intas's claim that the expert had confused the utterances
    of Baydemir and DTP Siirt province chair Murat Avci and the lawyer's
    demand for correction. The court has ordered the correction, and,
    if recordings of Baydemir exist, their analysis.

    Baydemir has been on trial under Article 216 of the old Penal Code for
    "inciting the public to hatred and hostility". The case will continue
    on 6 December.

    Eren Keskin, lawyer and former president of the Istanbul branch of
    the Human Rights Association (IHD), will not be tried for "inciting
    to hatred and hostility" after a speech she made in the Bulanik
    district of Mus, in which she used the term "Kurdistan". The Bulanik
    prosecution decreed that "however unacceptable it was, it consisted of
    expressing an opinion" and dropped proceedings. In the justification
    it said that the suspect had used the term Kurdistan to refer to the
    area mostly inhabited by Kurds. However, she will be tried for the
    use of the same term used at a panel entitled "Woman, Society and
    Family" at the Viransehir Culture and Arts Festival two and a half
    years ago. Keskin has said that there are 15 trials open against her
    under Articles 159 and 301.

    Ali Riza Vural, editor of Doz Publications, is being tried for
    "degrading and ridiculing the Republic in print" after publishing Mesut
    Barzani's two-volume book entitled "Barzani and the Kurdish National
    Freedom Movement". The Beyoglu 2nd Penal Court decided on 18 July
    to postpone the trial of Ahmet Zeki Okcuoglu, who had initally been
    tried in relation with the book. The case was opened under Article
    301/2 on 5 October 2005 and three years imprisonment is being demanded
    for Vural. The book was initially published in February 2003 and then
    withdrawn after a change in law. The second edition came out in May
    2005. Vural will appear in court on 28 November.

    The case against Arat Dink and Serkis Seropyan, editor and licence
    holder of the Agos newspaper respectively, continued on 17 July. The
    two journalists are being tried for an interview which murdered
    Hrant Dink gave the Reuters News Agency and for an article entitled
    "A Vote against 301". The trial was opened after Recep Akkus of
    the nationalist Great Lawyers' Union filed a complaint. The trial,
    brought under Article 301/1 continues on 11 October. Up to three
    years imprisonment are being demanded.

    Durmus Sahin, a student of the Ankara Gazi University Education
    Faculty, was arrested on 11 July when he refused to shake hands with
    Minister for Health Recep Akdag. Sahin had said, "I do not shake
    hands with those in government who do not provide services to the
    citizens". After five days detention, he was brought before the Olur
    Criminal Court of Peace. There Sahin said, "Although I did not want
    to shake hands, the minister persisted in wanting tos hake my hands.

    Because I did not give my hand, he sent me to prison." Sahin was
    released from detention but will be tried. A prison sentence from
    six months to two years is being demanded.

    The Ankara 14th Civil Court of First Instance has rejected the
    complaint of Prime Minister Erdogan against "Sabah" columnist Hincal
    Uluc. After the murder of Hrant Dink, he had written an article
    entitled "Sects and Presidential Candidacy", which was published
    on 7 February. Erdogan had demanded 20,000 YTL compensation for
    "serious atttack and slander", but on 12 July the court rejected the
    complaint. Uluc had claimed that the positions of Istanbul Police
    Chief Celalettin Cerrah and Minister of the Interior Abdulkadir Aksu
    were being protected after the murders of priest Andrea Santoro and
    journalist Hrant Dink because of their connections with religious
    sects and that the Prime Minister was closely linked to sects.

    On 8 July, the Ankara 14th Civil Court of First Instance also rejected
    the 20,000 YTL compensation case which the KOZA gold mining company
    (which uses cyanide in its extraction) opened against the "Gunluk
    Evrensel" newspaper. The complaint had been made when the newspaper
    reported on events which took place between KOZA goldmine employees and
    municipal officials on the one hand and the public on the other at the
    "Cyanide-Gold Environment Panel". The Izmir 2nd Civil Court of First
    Instance had rejected two complaints of the same company against the
    "Birgun" newspaper's editor Ibrahim Cesmecioglu and reporter Elcin
    Yagiz after the publication of two articles entitled, "Road of Acid"
    and "Closure Trial for Ovacik Gold Mine".

    Journalist Sinan Kara has been sentenced to 3 months and five days
    imprisonment and a fine of 522 YTL after Datca's district governor
    (Kaymakam) Savas Tuncer had filed a complaint against him for
    "insulting him in the press". The journalist was notified of the
    decision by the Datca Penal court, made on 4 July, on 23 July. In an
    article published on the website Memleketinsesi.com on 25 January
    2005, Kara had claimed that Tuncer was turning a blind eye to and
    protecting the smuggling of historical artifacts. Kara said, "Now I
    go to prison without complaining. These are the days we live in."

    Kara has spent a total of one year and three months in prison and
    there are 25 more cases against him. Should the court decision under
    Article 482/4 be ratified by the Supreme Court of Appeals, he will
    go to prison again.

    Prime Minister Erdogan has opened a 10,000 YTL compensation trial
    against journalist Cuneyt Arcayurek for attacking his personal
    rights. Arcayurek had appeared on the "Politika Duragi" programme of
    the Kanalturk channel and is said to have said, "Their insides and
    their outsides are lies. They are liars."

    On 4 July it was reported that Prime Ministerial advisor Cuneyd Zapsu's
    demand for 10,000 YTL compensation from the "Milliyet" newspaper and
    editor Dogan Akin had been rejected. the Istanbul 6th Civil Court of
    First Instance decideded on 28th June that the article written about
    Al Qaida operations and published on 3 July 2006 did not contain an
    insult to Zapsu. The complaint against the newspaper said a conscious
    slandering campaign against Zapsu had been initiated, wrong and
    misleading statements were made, and the impression was created in the
    public that he was connected to and supported terrorist organisations."

    On 2 July, the Ankara 5th Commercial Court of First Instance rejected
    the Army Mutual Aid Foundation (OYAK)'s 10 million YTL compensation
    claim from "Milliyet" journalists Gungor Uras and Metin Munir. They
    had criticised the fact that OYAK had bought the Erdemir iron and steel
    factories and then sold some of the shares to a foreign company. OYAK
    had also demanded a total of 25 million YTL compensation from Yigit
    Bulut, then writing for "Radikal", Aydin Ayaydin from "Sabah" and
    Ibrahim Haselcin of the "Star Borsaci" magazine.

    Corrections and Seeking Legal Redress

    The trial of N.B. and M.B., accused of attacking journalist Necip
    Capraz two years ago, started on 17 September. Capraz, a reporter for
    the Anatolia Agenc and the owner of the "Yuksekova News" in Hakkari
    province, had investigated reactionary activities. On 22 September
    2005, he was attacked by ten masked people and seriously injured. He
    then filed a complaint against his attackers. The court case will
    continue on 5 November. While the accused protest their innocence,
    Capraz has identified the car used that night and the driver of the
    car. The defendants are being tried for "deliberately causing injury".

    As of 10 August, "Cumhuriyet" newspaper's reporter Alper Turgut,
    who was attacked by riot police at Taksim Square when covering a
    forbidden 1 May rally there, has not yet been able to bring those
    responsible to trial. The Supreme Court of Appeals' Public Prosecution
    has decided not to proceed with the Turgut's lawyer Tora Pekin's
    complaint against Istanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah and the
    Riot Police Department. Pekin had complained to the Council of State
    Chamber Presidency because of "deliberate injury of a person" and
    "violation of the freedom to work". He had based his complaint on
    Articles 86/1, 3-c and 117/1 of the Turkish Penal Code.

    Three relatives of Mus's MP from the Justice and Development Party
    (AKP), Medeni Yilmaz, have been found guilty of threatening Emrullah
    Ozbey, owner of the local weekly "News 49" newspaper. Ozbey was told on
    5 July that Mahsun Yilmaz, Fatih Yilmaz and Ferit Yilmaz were given
    a two-year suspended sentence each. In addition, Mahsun Yilmaz has
    been fined for insulting the journalist.

    Reactions to censorship and monopolisation

    At the end of September, 114 lecturers at the prestigious Bosphorus
    University (Istanbul) condemned the trial of Prof. Dr. Baskin Oran
    and Prof. Dr. Ibrahim Kaboglu, the authors of the Minority Rights
    Report. Among them were Prof. Dr. Nukhet Sirman, Prof. Dr. Ayse Bugra,
    Prof. Dr. Edhem Eldem, Prof. Dr. Fatma Gok, Prof. Dr. Caglar Keyder
    and Assistant Prof. Dr. Koray Caliskan. The academics emphasised that
    the report "does not contain any elements of violence", as was claimed
    in the justification for the trial. They also demanded the abolition
    of Articles 301 and 216 and similar articles in the Turkish Penal
    Code and said, "We view Kaboglu and Oran's trial under Articles 301
    and 216 as a restriction of academic freedom."

    On 20 September the Human Rights Association (IHD) published its
    report on the first six months of 2007. According to the report, 94
    court cases were opened against 451 people who had used their right
    to freedom of expression, and 88 investigations were launched against
    361 people. In the 103 cases against 368 people which were concluded
    in that period, the punishments added up to 229 years, 3 months and
    15 days imprisonment and 7,981 YTL in fines. The IHD evaluated these
    statistics as an indication that "there has no improvement in the
    area of freedom of expression". According to the IHD, 17 cases in this
    period were brought under Article 301, 22 under Article 215 ("praising
    a crime and criminals"), 4 under Article 314, 2 under Article 216
    ("inciting the public to hatred and hostility"), 2 under Article 288
    ("attempting to influence the judiciary"), 20 under Article 7 of
    the Anti-Terrorism Law, 2 under the Law Concerning Crimes Committed
    against Ataturk, and 1 under Article 312 of the old Turkish Penal Code.

    On 10 September, the Istanbul 12th Heavy Penal Court decreed that the
    "Gundem" newspaper would be closed for 30 days as a punishment for
    publishing two articles by PKK leader Murat Karayilan, entitled "Let
    us become populist, let us win" and "Self-criticism not in words but
    in practice". The newspaper was accused of spreading PKK propaganda.

    The newspaper had had three previous publication bans, on 6 March 2007
    for 30 days, on 9 April 2007 for 15 days, and on 12 July 2007 for 15
    days. Editor-in-chief Yuksel Genc pointed out that the newspaper was
    being punished under a law which 10th President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
    had sent to the Constitutional Court. He added, "It is difficult to
    understand that our publication is being stopped for the forth time
    by an Article which tramples on the freedom of the press."

    The "Cagdas Tuzla" (Modern Tuzla) newspaper has won its case at
    the Istanbul 7th Administrative Court after its building was sealed
    up by the Tuzla municipality in Istanbul four months ago with the
    justification that there was no authorisation for employment in the
    building. Newspaper owner Halil Ozen announced that, after being
    deprived of their workplace for four months, the newspaper would
    sue Tuzla mayor Mehmet Demirci for compensation for material and
    mental damages.

    The judiciary in Turkey allows for the closure of a whole website if
    one item contained in it has become the subject of a complaint. After
    the alternative dictionary Eksi Sozluk and the Antoloji.com websites,
    the WorldPress.com website was closed in August. Cause for the closure
    was a complaint by Adnan Oktar. The Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
    organisation has previously stated that it finds this wholesale
    closure of a website "radical and disproportionate."

    A Regional Administrative Court has decreed that a park in Diyarbakir
    cannot be named after human rights activist and publisher Ayse Nur
    Zarakolu who died five yeras ago, arguing that she was a person who
    "supported separatist ideas and spread terrorist propaganda both
    in her own books and in the books she published". The widower of
    Ayse Nur Zarakolu, Ragip Zarakolu, journalist at the "Ulkede Ozgur
    Gundem" and publisher, said: "Ayse Nur Zarakolu, like Hrant Dink,
    was a person who tried to build bridges between our peoples on the
    basis of mutual respect , and she is one of the people who paid for
    this with her life."

    On 16 August, the G-9 Platform, which unites ten professional press
    organisations, condemned the dismissal of journalist Emin Colasan
    from the "Hurriyet" newspaper. The platform said that Colasan had
    committed years to the newspaper from which he was then dismissed
    arbitrarily. The platform described this as a warning that everyone
    needed to protect press freedom and freedom of expression. Reyhan
    Yalcindag, the president of the Human Rights Association (IHD), on
    the other hand, did not believe that Colasan was dismissed because
    of rights issues and took a more critical stance: "We do not consider
    thoughts which serve violence as freedom of expression."

    The Human Rights Association (IHD) branch in Adana (southern Turkey)
    received a letter by one Ayhan Bozkaya saying that the prison
    management does not give prisoners newspapers. On 13 August Ethem
    Acikalin of the IHD said that the association had applied to the
    Penal Execution Judge and the Ministry of Justice, protesting against
    the fact that daily newspapers and periodicals were not allowed into
    prison despite the fact that there was no court order to confiscate
    them. The letter of objection said that this was obstructing the right
    to inform oneself and that it represented a violation of international
    agreements that Turkey was part of. Acikalin said that prisoners at
    an F-type prison in Kurkculer (Adana) had been given newspapers after
    human rights associations had publicised their plight.

    On 24 July, the Turkey Journalists' Society (TGC) awarded its Freedom
    of Press Prizes to Rakel Dink, widow of murdered journalist Hrant Dink,
    publisher Ragip Zarakolu and lawyer Gulcin Cayligil as representatives
    of "all those journalists and writers who have suffered and been tried
    under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code.". TGC president Orhan
    Erinc presented the awards at the ceremony at Dolmabahce Palace in
    Istanbul. In his opening speech, he said, "Today censorship is not the
    direct inspection of newspapers, but the limiting clauses placed in
    laws." In her acceptance speech, Rakel Dink criticised Cemil Cicek,
    Minister of Justice when her husband was still alive. He had said,
    "Let them be happy, they get prizes because of us". Hrant Dink had
    replied, "Our greatest prize would be the abolishment of Article 301."

    In July, a heavy penal court in Istanbul stopped the "Guncel"
    newspaper from publishing for twelve days, arguing that it was the
    continuation of the "Gundem" newspaper which had been closed for
    15 days. "Gundem" had been closed on 15 July 2007 for an article
    on pre-election opinions in Batman, a province in the south-east
    of Turkey, published on 12 July and entitled: "Batman's message:
    Look after the guerrillas". Mehmet Samur, the editor-in-chief of the
    "Guncel" newspaper evaluated its closure in the daily "Evrensel"
    newspaper as "election censorship". The newspaper was closed until
    28 July, six days after the general elections took place.

    A Heavy Penal Court in Istanbul decreed the closure of the "Gundem"
    newspaper for fifteen days. Cause for the closure was an article
    published on 12 July in issued 132, entitled: "The Batman Message:
    Stand By the Guerrillas". The newspaper has been closed for 30 and
    15 days before and has now been closed for "spreading PKK propaganda
    in a call for violence". Friday's issue (13 July) of the newspaper
    was confiscated. Gundem's Editor-in-chief Yuksel Genc argued that the
    closure was a violation of the freedom of the press. He said that the
    newspaper was continually being targeted. The newspaper had quoted
    a worker from Batman as saying, "The people's expectations of the
    [pro-Kurdish] independent candidates are very clear. The people are
    sending them to parliament not in order to support PKK terrorism, but
    to support the people's children who are struggling for their rights."

    European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)

    On 20 September, the ECHR decreed that Turkey had violated the freedom
    of expression of 19 people in prison when not allowing them to write or
    receive letters. Three of them were Mahmut Sakar and Vedat Cetin from
    the Human Rights Association (IHD) and Erdal Tas, the editor-in-chief
    of the "New Agenda in 2000" (2000'de Yeni Gundem). The European court
    awarded the two IHD plaintiffs 3,500 Euros compensation each. The ECHR
    further decreed that Erdal Tas had not received a fair trial when he
    had twice been tried and fined under Article 6 of the Anti-Terrorism
    Law for "publishing the statements of the PKK". Turkey is to pay Turkey
    a total of 4,000 Euros compensation. Further, the court decreed that 16
    prisoners from Aydin prison, who had protested against the arrest of
    PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in a statement to the Ministry of Justice,
    should not have been tried for "separatist propaganda", as this was
    incongruous with the freedom of expression. The freedom of expression
    of Sukru Tapkan, Dilaver Keklik, Murat Dogan, Mehmet Hazbin Korkut,
    Hilmi Olsoy, Fuat Ay, Ali Budak, Celalettin Polat, Ahmet Ertas,
    Ilhami Gulmez, Hamdullah Kiran, Ibrahim Elbir, Velat Cetinkaya,
    Huseyin Vural, Ilhan Dayan and Riza Tan was thus limited unacceptably.

    However, the ECHR has only awarded Vural 1,000 Euros compensation
    for mental damages, while the others are to paid 1,000 legal costs.

    On 31 July, the ECHR decreed that Turkey did not limit the freedom
    of expression of former Kayseri mayor Sukru Karatepe when it punished
    him for "inciting hatred and hostility" in several of his speeches.

    On 9 October 1997, Karatepe had been sentenced to a year imprisonment
    and a fine by the Ankara State Security Court for "spreading hatred
    and hostility by pointing to differences in religion" in speeches
    made in October and November 1996. Karatepe was removed from his
    office in February 1998 and arrested on 24 April 1998. Karatepe, a
    member of the Welfare Party (RP), was given a conditional release on
    17 September 1998. While the ECHR acknowledged that the army members
    of the state security courts made fair trials less likely, and that
    this was incongruous with Article 6/1 of the European Convention on
    Human Rights, it found that Karatepe's punishment was not excessive,
    considering the aim of preventing the incitement to crime. Voting six
    to one, the ECHR decreed that the sentence did not violate Article
    10 of the Convention on Human Rights and denied Karatepe the right
    to compensation. It charged the former mayor with paying 500 Euros
    court expenses.

    On 24 July, the ECHR found Turkey guilty of "limiting freedom of
    expression" in an appeal against the banning of the "Yedinci Gundem"
    (Seventh Agenda) newspaper in the regions ruled by emergency law
    (OHAL regions). Although the ECHR acknowledged that decisions made
    in OHAL regions were not subject to the judiciary, it nevertheless
    found the case incongruous with Article 13 of the European Convention
    on Human Rights which deals with "the right to effective appeals to
    court". Complainants to the ECHR were Hunkar Demirel, Evrim Alatas,
    Lales Arslan, Mehmet Burtakucin, Zeynal Akgul, Abdulvahap Tas, Azad
    Ozkeskin, Bozkurt Mevlut, Ragip Zarakolu and Hidir Ates.

    The ECHR has found the punishment of Hasan Celal Guzel, who had been
    given a suspended prison sentence, wrong. In an article in the "Yeni
    Gunaydin" newspaper on 23 June 1997, Guzel had commented on the then
    President Suleyman Demirel, writing, "If you are President, then act
    like a President". Turkey is to pay Guzel 5,000 YTL legal costs.

    RTUK [Radio and Television Supreme Council] practices

    RTUK announce that Kanalturk's main news at 8 pm on 24, 25, 26 and
    28 June 2007 and the lunchtime news programme "Editor's Desk" at 1pm
    had conveyed interpretations which could the direct public against
    the Justice and Development Party (AKP). In the statement, RTUK said:
    "While news about many political parties was broadcast in up-to-date
    form, news regarding the AKP was broadcast in combination with the
    Prime Minister's speeches from the past and in a biased manner".

    Since 11 September, the channel has not been allowed to broadcast
    its main news programme. The "Word Parliament" programme presented
    by Tuncay Ozkan has also been stopped nine times. CHP leader Deniz
    Baykal has criticised RTUK's decision.

    The Supreme Electoral Council (YSK) has filed a complaint against RTUK
    president Zahid Akman and RTUK Monitoring and Evaluating Department
    Head Nurullah Ozturk at the Ankara Public Prosecution. The complaint
    concerns the fact that RTUK members Saban Sevinc and Mehmet Dabak are
    said to have deliberately given the names of TV channels and radio
    stations disobeying the election bans to the YSK late.

    The Supreme Electoral Council (YSK) punished 20 TV channels with
    warnings and programme bans because of violations of the pre-election
    broadcasting rules. Evaluating 117 monitoring reports, RTUK acted in
    39 cases. Kanalturk was punished with six programme bans, 24 TV was
    warned and three different programmes were banned 3, 6, and 9 times
    respectively. CNN Turk was warned, and two programmes were banned 3
    and 5 times respectively. Two programmes on Fox TV were banned three
    times each. Haber 7 and Haber Turk both received a warning and three
    programmes were banned once for each channel. Kanal 7 was warned and
    two programmes were banned 3 and 4 times respectively. ATV, Flash TV,
    Kanal B, Kanal D, NTV, Sky Turk and Star TV received a warning each.

    Kanalturk, Meltem TV and TGRT Haber received a warning each and
    three programmes on each channel were banned 3, 6, and 9 times
    respectively. Mesaj TV was warned and four programmes were banned 3,
    6, 9 and 12 times respectively. Ulusal 1 TV received a warning and
    three programmes were banned 3,4 and 6 times respectively. (EO/AG)

    http://www.bianet.org/english/kategori/en glish/102579/third-quarterly-media-monitoring-repo rt-full-text

    --Boundary_(ID_TbvxKb70Dglg2U3lzAO5G g)--
Working...
X