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ANKARA: Writer To Face Prosecution Under 301

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  • ANKARA: Writer To Face Prosecution Under 301

    WRITER TO FACE PROSECUTION UNDER 301

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 10 2008
    Turkey

    Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin has allowed the prosecution of
    a writer under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) for his
    remarks at a press conference following the murder of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink.

    Writer Temel Demirer was already facing charges over insulting
    Turkishness under Article 301 and with Å~^ahin's decision, the case
    is set to continue.

    The EU criticized Turkey for not amending Article 301, under which
    a number of intellectuals and activists, including Turkey's Nobel
    Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk, have landed in court for "insulting
    Turkishness." In an annual progress report released in early November
    of last year, the European Commission proposed not opening accession
    talks on one of the 35 negotiating chapters until Turkey amends or
    repeals Article 301.

    An amendment made to Article 301, which previously criminalized
    "insulting Turkishness" and has long been seen as an obstacle to
    freedom of speech in Turkey, made it obligatory for prosecutors to
    secure approval from the Justice Ministry before launching cases on
    301-related charges. It was hoped that the amendment, adopted in May
    of this year, would make legal prosecution of writers and intellectuals
    more difficult.

    Following the amendment to the article, the court halted the legal
    process on Demirer's case.

    Demirer is facing a jail sentence from one year and six months to
    five years under the amended Article 301.

    The unamended version of the article was also seen by some circles as
    being responsible for the death of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, who was shot dead outside his office in Ä°stanbul in January
    2007 by an ultra-nationalist teenager. Dink became a target after
    301-related charges were brought against him by ultra-nationalist
    lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz, his friends, lawyers and other intellectuals
    argued. An investigation into the Ergenekon crime network has created
    the suspicion that Dink's murder was planned by groups and individuals
    with links to the state.

    --Boundary_(ID_dovymnO/4efIfwbhZ8wNuw)--
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