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Turkish Overturns Academics' Acquittal

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  • Turkish Overturns Academics' Acquittal

    TURKISH OVERTURNS ACADEMICS' ACQUITTAL

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 13, 2007 Thursday 5:05 PM GMT

    A Turkish appeals court on Thursday overturned the acquittal of two
    academics who put out a government-sponsored report urging greater
    rights for minority groups such as Kurds, opening the way for their
    possible re-trial for sedition.

    The court ruled against the acquittal, saying the October 2004 report
    by professors Baskin Oran and Ibrahim Kaboglu constituted a threat
    to the state.

    "Creation and recognition of a new minority... would endanger the
    unitary state and the nation's indivisibility," the appeals court
    said in its verdict, carried by the Anatolia news agency.

    Ankara recognizes only the Greek, Armenian and Jewish communities
    as religious minorities under the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, the founding
    accord of modern-day Turkey.

    The court also objected to the report's recommendation that people
    be allowed to identify themselves with different ethnic roots along
    with their Turkish citizenship.

    "With this recommendation, the report has stepped over the boundaries
    of criticism and freedom of thought, and its accusatory content
    borders on a threat to social peace," it added.

    The court said both professors should be convicted of inciting
    racial hatred.

    The Ankara court that acquitted Oran and Kaboglu of sedition last
    year said they were protected by free-speech laws.

    The two men were members of the Human Rights Advisory Board, a body
    attached to the prime minister's office which penned the controversial
    report.

    The report was never published and was disowned by the government
    amid charges by nationalists groups that it was treasonous.

    According to excerpts leaked to the press at the time, the report
    maintained that Turkey's understanding of minority rights had fallen
    behind universal norms and proposed far-reaching amendments to the
    constitution and related laws.

    It described as "paranoia" widespread concerns that equal cultural
    rights for minorities could lead to the country's break-up, fuelled
    by a bloody Kurdish rebellion in the southeast in the 1980s and 1990s.

    Minority rights are a thorny issue in Turkey's bid to join the European
    Union, as is the prosecution of writers and intellectuals for peaceful
    expression of opinion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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