Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turkey, EU Need Press Freedom

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

  • ANKARA: Turkey, EU Need Press Freedom

    TURKEY, EU NEED PRESS FREEDOM

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 26 2008
    Turkey

    Turkey has reformed some clauses of its censorship law, especially
    Article 301, but the law remains an impediment to press freedom,
    said David Dadge, director of the International Press Institute (IPI).

    Dadge spoke to Turkish journalists in Ä°stanbul on Monday evening at
    the Mecidiyeköy office of the Turkish Broadcasters Association. The
    meeting was held under the auspices of the Press Institute Association
    (Basın Enstitusu Dernegi) and the national committee of the IPI.

    Article 301 is the law under which novelist Orhan Pamuk and many
    other writers and journalists have been prosecuted for "insulting
    Turkishness." This year's reforms replaced that vague term with
    "Turkish nation," reduced the maximum sentence under the law to two
    years, and mandated authorization from the justice minister for any
    prosecutions, but the law is still unjust, said Dadge.

    The IPI director referred to the 2007 murder of Armenian-Turkish
    journalist Hrant Dink, convicted under the law, as sad proof that such
    legal accusations tend to feed a cycle of violence. Prosecution leaves
    people suspected of being anti-Turkish, which in turn leads fanatics
    "to attack or silence" their perceived enemies, Dadge said.

    Dadge holds an honorary law degree and is the author of several books
    on press freedom: "Casualty of War: The Bush Administration's Assault
    on a Free Press," "Silenced: International Journalists Expose Media
    Censorship" and "The War in Iraq and Why the Media Failed Us." The
    former editor of IPI's World Press Freedom Review, Dadge became IPI
    director in January.

    Tensions with Ankara

    Hurriyet newspaper's foreign news editor Ferai Tinc, head of the IPI
    national committee, introduced Dadge by noting that press freedom and
    integrity have been under assault this year by government authorities
    in Ankara, including the prime minister.

    "This deep-seated sensitivity doesn't need to exist," said Dadge. "It
    takes confidence to discuss the army, legal cases or the Armenian
    issue." He cited other articles of the penal code that forbid
    insults to the army (Article 318) or comments on a current legal case
    (Article 208).

    Worse still, politicians have becomes as sensitive as institutions,
    said Dadge, citing a war of words from the government over media
    coverage of the Ergenekon trial, the Deniz Feneri case and perceived
    government pressure regarding accreditation of journalists to cover
    the prime minister to southeastern Turkey. The IPI director several
    times mentioned the refusal of accreditation for news organizations
    such as Zaman and Today's Zaman to attend military briefings, which
    he portrayed as a self-defeating attempt to manipulate the media.

    Dadge criticized Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan for his reaction
    to press coverage of the Deniz Feneri case, a prosecution in Germany
    that alleged that a charitable Turkish fund had diverted money
    back to Turkey for non-charitable purposes, including transfers
    to the government or to Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
    officials. Incensed at the allegations reported in the Turkish press,
    Erdogan told his supporters not to buy those newspapers, which Dadge
    said was a hit at the business of those media organizations and an
    attempt to influence coverage.

    "You would think politicians deserved a greater standard of care
    from the media, but the opposite is true," said Dadge. "Media should
    criticize politicians more, not less. And governments have to explain
    themselves to the media, not remove those news organizations they
    don't like."

    The media must hold the government to account and insist on their
    right to access information, he said. News organizations must ring
    the alarm bells internationally, through IPI if need be, and should
    show solidarity in Turkey and with one voice tell the prime minister
    to take two steps back from criticizing the media. In addition,
    and perhaps the most crucial point, is for Turkish media to adopt
    and enforce strict codes of conduct so that they can justify their
    coverage to themselves and their critics.

    EU has troubles, too

    It is important for governments to understand the difference between
    news and editorial departments, to understand that a critical op-ed
    piece does not mean that the whole news organization is negative toward
    that politician or policy, said Dadge. There is a blurred distinction
    between news and editorial both in and outside of the European Union.

    Dadge cited several recent cases in the EU that broadly interpreted
    what constitutes criminal defamation: An Italian journalist in 2007
    was sentenced to 18 months for reporting on politicians patronizing
    prostitutes; a Polish journalist in 2007 got six months; and the
    Slovakian parliament this year proposed a law making editors and
    publishers criminally liable for opinions expressed in their news
    organizations.

    "The EU accession process has no benchmark, does not consider press
    freedom," said Dadge. "The process as it stands could let Turkey join
    with some of these problems remaining."

    In the conflict between notions of individual privacy versus press
    freedom, there used to be a presumption of press rights, he said, but
    now judges are more likely to favor considerations of privacy. For
    example, he cited this summer's incident of photographs showing
    racing association head Max Mosely in Nazi costume with a prostitute;
    nonetheless Mosley won a libel suit against tabloid News of the World.

    News organizations also need to resist government attempts to use
    "national interest" to override press freedom, said Dadge. They need
    to fight terrorism-led governments that curtail civil liberties in
    general and press rights in particular. In the United Kingdom, for
    example, the government can use a "D-notice" to prevent the press from
    discussing sensitive topics or topics embarrassing to the government.

    In the EU, there is a fear that discussing radical Islam in print or
    on TV may incite fanatics to launch terrorist attacks, he said.

    But the EU cannot lecture others on human rights when the union has
    no benchmark on press freedom, said Dadge. The harmonization process
    lets Bulgaria slide by without any look at its press freedom, for
    example. Bulgaria entered the EU with huge corruption and a growing
    mafia network, but a free press is the best antidote to government
    corruption, and the situation with Sofia points to the failure of
    the EU to see press freedom as fundamental to democracy.

    The journalists at the meeting spent 90 minutes sharing thoughts at
    the microphone. One reporter said he looked up "freedom of press" on
    Google, hit the third item on the list and immediately got a warning
    page from the government: "Access to this site is banned ..."

    --Boundary_(ID_jaAJ6265yaIKOqnon9mXQw)- -
Working...
X