Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey: Authorities To Amend Restrictive Laws After YouTube Blocked

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

  • Turkey: Authorities To Amend Restrictive Laws After YouTube Blocked

    TURKEY: AUTHORITIES TO AMEND RESTRICTIVE LAWS AFTER YOUTUBE BLOCKED AGAIN

    Reporters Sans Frontieres/ Reporters without Borders
    May 13 2008
    France

    Reporters Without Borders is astonished that access to the
    video-sharing website YouTube has been blocked again in Turkey since
    5 May as a result of court orders issued by Ankara magistrate courts
    on 24 and 30 April. The grounds for blocking the website were not
    given in either case.

    "We call on the authorities to give the reasons for these orders,"
    Reporters Without Borders said. "This is the third time in less than
    two months that YouTube has been blocked in Turkey. The authorities
    do not need to block an entire website just because of a few videos
    they consider 'shocking.' Doing this is an abuse, as YouTube is able
    to stop the distribution of offending videos in any given country."

    Law 5651 on "the organization of online publications and the fight
    against crime committed by means of such publications," in effect
    since November 2007, enables a prosecutor to get a website banned
    within 24 hours if its content is deemed likely to incite suicide,
    paedophilia, drug use, obscenity, prostitution or offend the memory
    of Ataturk, the Turkish republic's founder.

    "This law opens the door to too many abuses," Reporters Without
    Borders said. "Its collateral damage has included the blocking of
    entire sites such as YouTube, Indymedia Istanbul and WordPress. We
    urge the authorities to amend Law 5621 so that people can express
    themselves freely on the Internet again. Turkey has a legislative
    arsenal that places too many restrictions on freedom of expression."

    The Indymedia Istanbul website (http://istanbul.indymedia.org) has
    been inaccessible within Turkey since 21 March. The site's staff are
    continuing to post articles at another web address and describe the
    blockage as just "an attempt at censorship." The authorities "still
    have not understood that censorship is technically impossible on
    the Internet," they said. WordPress, one of the most popular blog
    platforms in the world, was only recently unblocked after being
    accessible since August 2007.

    Other participative websites are also blocked. The photo-sharing site
    Slide has been inaccessible since 25 March as a result of a court's
    decision in Civril (southwest of Ankara) because of "photos and
    articles considered insulting to Ataturk." Google Groups, Google's
    discussion site, has been inaccessible since 10 April as a result
    of an action brought by religious leader Adnan Oktar claiming he had
    been defamed in comments posted on the site.

    Kurdish media websites have also been targeted. The website of Gundem,
    a daily newspaper, has been inaccessible since 1 April as a result a
    decision by a court of assizes in Ankara. The site of the Firat News
    Agency (ANF) has been blocked since 11 February. In these two cases,
    the grounds are "propaganda" in support of the outlawed Kurdistan
    Workers Party (PKK). Neither media was told of the decision or given
    a chance to defend itself.

    Freedom of expression in Turkey is often limited by criminal code
    provisions that punish threats to fundamental national interests
    (article 305), inciting hatred, hostility or humiliation (article
    216), attacking the memory of Ataturk (Law 5816 of 25 July 1951) or
    discouraging the population from doing military service (article 318).

    The Turkish parliament amended article 301 of the criminal code on
    30 April, replacing "insulting Turkish identity" by "insulting the
    Turkish nation." But this still leaves judges a great deal of scope
    to convict anyone who publicly raises such sensitive issues as the
    Armenian genocide or the Kurdish issue. Most article 301 cases will now
    be heard before magistrate courts instead of criminal courts. Orhan
    Pamuk, a Nobel prize-winning novelist, and Hrant Dink, a journalist
    of Armenian origin who was murdered by ultra-nationalists in Istanbul
    in January 2007, were both prosecuted under article 301.

    Anti-terrorism Law 3713 also punishes websites that post "the
    propaganda of a terrorist organization" or "the press releases of
    such organizations."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X