Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Free Speech Reform Said Approved By Turk Parliament

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

  • Free Speech Reform Said Approved By Turk Parliament

    FREE SPEECH REFORM SAID APPROVED BY TURK PARLIAMENT

    ChristianToday, UK
    April 30 2008

    Turkey's parliament approved a long-awaited revision of a law
    criticised by the European Union for limiting free speech in the
    candidate country, but writers and activists say the reform does not
    go far enough.

    Turkey's parliament approved a long-awaited revision of a law
    criticised by the European Union for limiting free speech in the
    candidate country, but writers and activists say the reform does not
    go far enough.

    State news agency Anatolian said the reform to article 301 of the
    penal code was approved early on Wednesday with 250 votes for and 65
    against amid fierce criticism from the nationalist opposition.

    The article has been used to prosecute hundreds of writers, including
    Nobel Literature Laureate Orhan Pamuk, for "insulting Turkishness".

    After the reform, it will be a crime to insult the Turkish nation,
    rather than Turkishness, and the justice minister's permission will
    be required to open a case. The maximum sentence will be cut to two
    years from three.

    But writers and publishers fear they will continue to face frequent
    trials as they argue that the changes are minor while other laws
    restricting freedom of expression remain intact.

    Brussels had also given a lukewarm response to the reform. On a
    recent trip to Turkey, European Commission President Jose Manuel
    Barroso said it was a step in the right direction.

    The EU has said easing restrictions on free speech is a test of
    Turkey's commitment to political reform as Ankara looks to advance
    slow-moving membership talks which began in 2005.

    Defending the reform against criticism from the opposition, Justice
    Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said there would still be restrictions on
    insulting Turkey.

    "With this change, it is not a question of letting people insult
    Turkishness freely," he told parliament.

    NATIONALIST OPPOSITION

    The reform has been controversial in Turkey, where nationalism has
    grown in recent years along with disillusionment with the EU. The
    bill, passed after eight hours of mostly late-night debate, had been
    delayed several times amid stiff opposition from nationalists.

    Armenian-Turkish editor Hrant Dink, who was shot dead by an
    ultra-nationalist youth last year, had been convicted under article
    301.

    Turkey's far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) accused the
    government of betraying the country's identity, and instead pandering
    to EU demands that it reform laws prohibiting Turks from insulting
    their nation.

    MHP leader Devlet Bahceli told a meeting of his party ahead of the
    vote the reform would be a "historical mistake".

    "Slandering Turkey's honourable history, insulting the Turkish nation
    and the values of Turkishness has become a habit with the AK Party's
    political thinking, which lacks a sense of identity," he said.

    The main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) also opposed the
    reform. The pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP), whose members
    often end up in court for expressing views on the Kurdish issue,
    wanted to abolish the article.

    Article 301 has notably been used against writers such as Pamuk
    for comments on the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in
    1915-16. Turkey denies claims by Armenians and many Western historians
    that the killings constituted genocide.
Working...
X