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Turkish Prime Minister afraid of unpublished books, MP says

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  • Turkish Prime Minister afraid of unpublished books, MP says

    Turkish Prime Minister afraid of unpublished books, MP says


    March 26, 2011 - 13:01 AMT 09:01 GMT
    PanARMENIAN.Net -

    A Turkish court issued an order for all draft copies of a jailed
    journalist's yet unpublished book to be confiscated.

    The court ordered police to seize all draft documents and copies of
    investigative journalist Ahmet Sik's book, which reportedly focuses on
    the influence of an Islamic group within the police force. Sik was
    jailed earlier this month - along with six other journalists - accused
    of links to an alleged hardline secularist plot to topple Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government in 2003. Their arrests drew
    expressions of concern from Western governments and international
    media rights groups.

    Some 400 people, including other journalists, politicians and military
    officers, are already on trial, accused of membership in an alleged
    terror network, called Ergenekon, which prosecutors say conspired to
    provoke public unrest and trigger a coup to bring down the government.

    Critics say the government is using the case to round up government
    opponents, an accusation Erdogan rejects. The government has backed
    the investigation, saying it is strengthening democracy.

    Police raided and searched the premises of an Istanbul publishing
    house. Ahmet Oz, an editor at the publishing house told reporters
    police had destroyed an electronic copy of the draft from a computer.
    Police also seized a copy from Sik's colleague and friend, Ertugrul
    Mavioglu, the journalist said. Sik had sent him a copy to read,
    seeking his opinions.

    The confiscation order comes weeks after a prosecutor investigating
    the case insisted none of the journalists were detained for any of
    their writings and said he had evidence on the journalists which he
    was unable to disclose. Sik's lawyer had said the journalist planned
    to name the book "The Army of the Imam," after influential Islamic
    preacher, Fethullah Gulen, who is believed to have millions of
    followers in Turkey.

    The journalist suggested that his detention was linked to his book,
    shouting "anyone who touches (Gulen) burns" as he was being taken away
    by police on March 3, The Associated Press reports.

    `It's for the first time when an unpublished book is being eliminated.
    Prime Minister is scared of even unwritten books,' Cumhuriyet quoted
    an opposition MP as saying.




    From: A. Papazian
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