Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Erdogan Contradicts Minister On Reform

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

  • Erdogan Contradicts Minister On Reform

    ERDOGAN CONTRADICTS MINISTER ON REFORM

    Gulf Times
    Jan 9 2008
    Qatar

    ANKARA: Turkey's prime minister, contradicting his justice minister,
    said yesterday that parliament would not this week consider planned
    changes to a law used to prosecute writers that the European Union
    wants amended.

    The EU, which Ankara hopes to join, says tackling article 301 of
    Turkey's penal code is a litmus test of the large Muslim but secular
    country's commitment to political reforms.

    The article makes it a crime to insult "Turkishness" and has been
    used to prosecute dozens of writers and journalists, including Nobel
    Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk.

    Asked whether the article would be changed this week, Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters: "No. At the moment our work
    (on the article) is continuing. After the work has finished ... At
    the moment there is nothing."

    Earlier, Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said the work on the new
    text had been completed. On Monday, Sahin said the revised article
    would be sent to parliament this week.

    The apparent delay is a measure of the sensitivity of the issue for
    Erdogan's ruling AK Party government as it fends off attacks from
    nationalist parties and tries to avoid the impression it is bowing
    to EU pressure.

    "To discuss changing this article will create new tensions in today's
    conditions," Devlet Bahceli, leader of the Nationalist People's Party
    (MHP), said yesterday.

    "For us, changing this article means blackening the honourable history
    of Turkey ... and rewarding those who are seeking a chance to insult
    Turkey's national and moral values."

    The article has been used especially against writers such as Pamuk
    commenting on the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915-16.

    Turkey denies claims by Armenians and many Western historians that
    the killings constituted a systematic genocide.

    Under the government's proposal, officials say, the justice ministry
    will in future have to give permission for cases to be opened under
    article 301, a move that should prevent nationalist prosecutors with
    their own political agenda exploiting the law. - Reuters
Working...
X