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International Observers to Attend FOE Cases

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  • International Observers to Attend FOE Cases

    Kurdish Info, Germany
    March 2 2005

    International Observers to Attend FOE Cases


    BianetISTANBUL / 2 March 2005 / by IPA/International PEN
    2 March trials of Fikret Baskaya and Ragip Zarakolu symbolise the
    continuation of freedom of expression problems in Turkey.
    International PEN, and the IPA, as well as other international NGOs,
    among them Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, are in
    Turkey to attend as observers the trial hearings against writer
    Fikret Baskaya and publisher Ragip Zarakolu, set for 2 March 2005.

    Fikret Baskaya will be tried in Ankara on charges of 'insult to the
    State, State institutions, and the military' under Article 159 of the
    current Penal Code. He could face a three-year jail sentence. The
    charges stem from articles published in the early nineties (since
    republished as a book entitled: "Articles against the Current") in
    which he was critical of the Turkish authorities.
    Ragip Zarakolu, co-founder and owner of Belge Publishing, is charged
    in Istanbul with 'incitement to racial hatred' under Article 312 of
    the current Penal Code, charges occasioned by his writing of an
    article critical of Turkey's foreign policy on Kurdish issues. The
    charges carry a two-year jail sentence. An additional case was
    initiated against him in December 2004 for the publication of George
    Jerjian's Book entitled: "The truth will set us free/Armenians and
    Turks reconciled" for insulting the State and the memory of the
    founder of the Republic, Atatürk. The first hearing in this case is
    due to take place in Istanbul on 16 March 2005. An investigation was
    also opened for his publication of Zulkuf Kisanak's "Lost Villages".
    Lars Grahn, Chairman of the IPA Freedom to Publish Committee,
    declares: "Both Fikret Baskaya and Ragip Zarakolu have been subjected
    to a series of long, time-consuming and expensive court hearings.
    Whatever the outcome of these trials, this is in itself a form of
    harassment and punishment for daring to produce works which touch on
    sensitive issues".
    There are currently an estimated 60 writers, publishers and
    journalists under judicial process in Turkey for practicing their
    right to freedom of expression. In this regard, the 2 March trial
    hearings of Fikret Baskaya and Ragip Zarakolu are just two out of
    many. Eugene Schoulgin, Member of the Board of International PEN
    says: "To us, they symbolise the continuation of freedom of
    expression problems in Turkey".
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