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Turkish Net Closures Spark Doubt Over Freedoms

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  • Turkish Net Closures Spark Doubt Over Freedoms

    TURKISH NET CLOSURES SPARK DOUBT OVER FREEDOMS
    Thomas Grove

    Reuters
    Globe and Mail
    September 24, 2008 at 5:26 PM EDT
    Canada

    ISTANBUL -- A Turkish court decision to ban the website of a renowned
    British atheist academic has stirred fresh doubts about the European
    Union candidate's commitment to freedom of speech.

    Approximately 850 Internet websites, including Youtube, have been
    blocked this year in Turkey, the number swollen by recent laws making
    it possible to block sites without a court order.

    "When you look at Internet regulation Turkey looks to be in the same
    league as Tunisia or North Korea, and that doesn't bode well for EU
    requirements," said Cengiz Aktar, professor at Istanbul's Bahcesehir
    University.

    "The Internet is one of the most instrumental means of spreading
    information, it is an unprecedented instrument, and forbidding the
    internet is forbidding freedom of speech," he said.

    The website of Oxford professor and evolutionist Richard Dawkins
    was banned in Turkey earlier this month after the Muslim country's
    leading creationist advocate, Adnan Oktar, said he had found slanders
    of himself there.

    The website currently carries in its masthead a picture of the Turkish
    flag and the heading "Banned in Turkey."

    Turkey's AK Party government, which has roots in political Islam but
    also embraces centre-right and nationalist groupings, says it has
    broadened the scope of public debate since taking power in 2002. But
    curbs on websites and a dispute with the country's leading publishing
    group have raised concerns.

    Turkey is hoping to start this year two new chapters of EU reform work,
    which deal with media and society, and analysts say Europe will not
    be pleased with Turkish Internet regulations.

    The majority of sites in Turkey closed by court order are due to
    allegations sites encourage suicide, contain libel, child pornography,
    help users access drugs or promote prostitution.

    But Internet websites, including Youtube, have also been closed
    for insulting Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey,
    or for touching on the concept of Turkishness, a sensitive issue in
    the deeply nationalist-minded country.

    Internet regulations have been tightened even further recently with
    a law that was passed in May, giving permission to the country's
    Telecommunications Directorate to close down websites based on
    complaints by individual users.

    "All you have to do is give the name of the Internet site, give
    some information about the Internet site about why you think the
    site is illegal," said Ceren Unal, assistant professor of law at
    Bilkent University.

    "If they [Telecommunications Directorate] take your complaint into
    consideration and they usually do, the site will be closed down."

    The ease with which Internet sites have been closed has rattled free
    speech advocates in Turkey, a predominantly Muslim country but with
    a secular constitution.

    "It's like finding two pages in a book illegal and reacting by closing
    down the entire library," said Mustafa Akgul, an internet expert at
    Bilkent University.

    "It's not only about becoming part of the European Union, about
    becoming a democracy. It's about joining the rest of the world."

    The European Union has long criticized free-speech rights in Turkey
    since the days of article 301, which punished writers for "insulting
    Turkishness."

    Under pressure from the EU, the article was changed replacing
    "Turkishness" with "the Turkish nation." But critics say the vagueness
    of the term can still lead to arbitrary prosecution.

    The article was used to prosecute Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk
    and Turkish ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was killed by
    an ultranationalist.

    In protest at the court banning internet websites, some 500 internet
    sites closed themselves earlier this summer.

    Across the page was written in bold red lettering: "Access to this
    Internet site has been blocked on our own decision," mocking the
    statement that comes up on Youtube in Turkey, "blocked by court
    decision."

    One of the largest on-line Turkish-English dictionaries Zargan
    participated in the protest.

    "I was personally very disturbed by the arbitrary decisions. especially
    the fact that no explanation is given. Censorship must be clear and
    should not be politically guided," said Orhan Bilgin, founding member
    of Zargan.

    Closing Internet sites has led to a proliferation of proxy websites
    that contain the same content as a banned site, but on a different
    web address.

    Proxies for Youtube number in the dozens and similar proxies exist
    for other banned websites.

    "In the end this might be good for Turkey, we're becoming incredible
    savvy about getting around these bans," said Mr. Bilgin.
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