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  • Hopes low for clarifying anti-Turkishness concept

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Jan 11 2008


    HOPES LOW FOR CLARIFYING ANTI-`TURKISHNESS' CONCEPT

    By Burak Bekdil

    Friday, January 11, 2008


    The infamous Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which outlaws
    `humiliating Turkishness,' has been the focal point of criticism that
    the country lacks decent legislation allowing free speech.

    Knowing that, Turkey's pro-EU government is working to amend that
    article, but in a way that will probably not please anyone. The
    current, very vague definition of what constitutes an offense is
    about to be `softened,' but the new version may not be any better.

    Even worse, there is no consensus on the amendment, even within the
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The government has now
    delayed a vote on the proposed changes in parliament until next week
    (Turkish Daily News, Today's Zaman, January 9).

    Under the current penal code, Article 301 makes denigrating
    "Turkishness" or insulting the country's institutions a crime that
    can be punished by up to three years in prison.

    The law has been used more than 60 times against writers and
    intellectuals -- including Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and slain
    ethnic-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink -- since it went into effect
    June 2005 (Today's Zaman, January 9).

    Working together, Deputy Prime Minister (and former minister of
    justice) Cemil Cicek and incumbent Minister of Justice Mehmet Ali
    Sahin announced on January 7 that under the amended provision,
    prosecutors must obtain permission from the Justice Ministry to be
    able to press charges and that the ambiguous word "Turkishness" would
    be replaced with `the Turkish nation' (Today's Zaman, January 9).

    Cicek is known to have objected to the amendment, arguing that many
    EU-member countries have similar articles in their penal codes. Cicek
    also argued that the new practice would turn justice ministers, who
    will have to make the decision whether to endorse prosecution, into
    targets (Today's Zaman, January 9).

    Overall, the proposed amendment has not impressed intellectuals
    inside Turkey, and it was not clear how effectively it would prevent
    nationalist prosecutors from pressing charges against opinion-makers
    for their speeches or writings.

    `If the government hopes to leave behind its 301-related headaches
    with some cosmetic changes to the law, what it has offered so far
    won't help at all,' wrote columnist Yusuf Kanli (Turkish Daily News,
    January 9). Kanli said the government was `unwilling to take any
    meaningful steps in fear of a possible nationalistic backlash.'

    `Let's put it right straight away!' Kanli wrote. `As it stands within
    the current proposal for its amendment, the contentious Article 301
    will remain a chain on free thought... What's proposed is not reform.
    What we are seeing is deception in action!'

    Nobel laureate Pamuk was prosecuted for commenting on the mass
    killings of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century. Dink,
    editor of the Armenian minority newspaper Agos, was killed in front
    of his Istanbul office in January 2007. His assassination stirred the
    debate about Article 301, with many observers saying he had become a
    target of nationalist circles because of his prosecution.

    The Turkish government took a year to respond to Dink's murder, and
    it only focused on the issue after a final warning from the EU in
    November to repeal or amend the article.

    `It is not acceptable that writers, journalists, academics, and other
    intellectuals ... are prosecuted for simply expressing a critical,
    but completely nonviolent opinion,' EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli
    Rehn said when presenting the annual progress report on Turkey in
    November. `The infamous Article 301 must be repealed or amended
    without delay.'

    While the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party favors the abolishment
    of the entire article, Devlet Bahceli, leader of the Nationalist
    Action Party, strongly opposes any changes.

    `The amendments mean slandering the glorious history of Turkey and
    despising the Turkish nation. It will reward those who seek an
    opportunity to insult the national and spiritual values of Turkey,'
    Bahceli said (Dogan News Agency, January 8).

    Fatma Disli, a columnist for Today's Zaman newspaper, wrote on
    January 9 that the opposition to the amendment makes it difficult to
    record progress. `The opposition within parliament to the amendment
    of the article and the heightened nationalist feelings in the Turkish
    public indicate that Turkey has a long way to go before it can
    [re]move one of the most problematic barriers on its EU path,' Disli
    wrote.

    Ismet Berkan of Radikal newspaper wrote that even if the article were
    amended, it would not ease the EU's concerns, since the proposed
    amendment retains the nebulous phrase "Turkish identity." `Acting on
    such an abstract concept, all the opinions harboring criticism about
    state institutions or the Turkish identity may be regarded as an
    insult to the things in question,' Today's Zaman quoted Berkan as
    saying on January 9.
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