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  • Call for major amendments to criminal code that threatens press fr.

    Reporters without borders, France
    May 25 2005

    Call for major amendments to new criminal code that threatens press
    freedom

    Reporters Without Borders said it shared the concerns of Turkish
    journalists over threats to press freedom from a new criminal law
    that still needed major amendments before coming into force on 1st
    June. . Despite revisions voted by parliament after it was adjourned
    on 31 March 2005 following strong media protests, the organisation
    repeated its call for the removal of prison sentences for press
    offences.

    "Far from bringing Turkish law into line with European law on freedom
    of expression, some articles of the code on the contrary would
    facilitate arbitrary legal action against journalists and entailing a
    climate of self-censorship damaging to press freedom", it said.

    Several articles of the new code are particularly perilous. Article
    305 which punishes acts that go against "fundamental national
    interests" by prison sentences of three to ten years, threatens
    journalists and the right of the public to be informed. Any claim to
    do with the "Armenian genocide" or "withdrawal of Turkish armed
    forces in Cyprus" would be considered as against "fundamental
    national interests".

    Dozens of journalists have been imprisoned in the past for having
    simply expressed their opinion on this type of subject. Turkish
    deputies did nevertheless agree to remove paragraph 2 of the article
    which set out a 50 % increase in sentences if the offence was
    committed via the press.

    Article 301 that is to replace 159 has been used in the past to
    severely punish any criticism of parliament, the justice system or
    the security forces. It will be termed in future "Humiliation of
    Turkish identity, the Republic, state institutions and bodies". It
    will allow wide scope for interpretation and threaten anyone
    criticising Turkish identity, the state or parliament with a prison
    sentence of six months to three years. Any person who attacks the
    government, justice system or the security forces moreover faces six
    months to two years in prison.

    Article 285 threatens with four and half years in prison anyone
    "violating the confidentiality of an investigation". This could be a
    serious threat to the right of journalists to protect their sources.

    Article 277 punishes anyone trying to "sway the justice system" with
    two to four years in prison and potentially puts in danger
    journalists covering court proceedings.

    Under Article 267 of the new code, defamation in the press with the
    aim of exposing someone to a judicial investigation is liable to a
    one to four-year prison sentence.

    Article 216, formerly 312, punishes with one to three years in prison
    "deliberate incitement of a section of the population to hatred and
    hostility through discrimination on the basis of race, region or
    membership of a religious group, against another section of the
    population" that causes "a clear and direct danger to the public"
    (paragraph 1).

    "Humiliation of a section of the population due to social, religious,
    sexual or regional differences" is liable to a sentence of six months
    to one year in prison (paragraph 2). "Overt humiliation of a person
    because of their religious principles is liable to six months to one
    year in prison if the offence threatens social peace" (Paragraph 3).
    This "humiliation", a very vague legal concept, capable of being
    interpreted very widely by jurisprudence, directly threatens freedom
    of expression both for journalists and for the general public.

    This is not an exhaustive list. Turkish journalists and press freedom
    organisations see parliamentary amendments drawn up ahead of 1st June
    to the version of the code as it was to have been applied on 1st
    April, as very inadequate. They consider that only six of the 20
    problematic points have been revised Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    government.
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