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  • Repression In Turkey

    REPRESSION IN TURKEY

    http://www.economist.com/node/21550334
    Mar 17th 2012

    Enemies of the state

    Four journalists are released from prison. Dozens are less lucky

    Sener is smiling, but unhappy

    "HOW can I be happy when so many of my colleagues are not free?" The
    question was asked by Nedim Sener, an investigative journalist who
    this week was freed on bail, along with three other journalists, after
    spending more than a year in an Istanbul prison on thin charges that
    he was part of a conspiracy to overthrow Turkey's ruling Justice and
    Development (AK) party.

    He is right to ask. At least 100 journalists are behind bars in
    Turkey, more than in any other country. Most are held on terrorism
    charges. But under Turkey's nebulous anti-terror laws, even covering
    a press conference by the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy party could
    get you locked up. The pro-Kurdish DIHA news agency says 27 of its
    reporters are in jail. Journalists who criticise Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    the prime minister, face the sack at the hands of timid media bosses.

    Mr Sener was arrested last year with Ahmet Sik, a journalist who built
    his career uncovering human-rights abuses. Mr Sener dug into alleged
    police complicity in the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink, an Armenian-Turkish
    newspaper publisher. Both men wrote books that were fiercely critical
    of Turkey's most influential Islamic movement, led by Fethullah
    Gulen, a reclusive imam who lives in America. Many think that under
    AK rule the "Gulenists" have infiltrated Turkey's police force and
    judiciary, and the journalists sought to prove this. "Those who touch
    [the Gulenists] burn!" Mr Sik cried as he was arrested last year.

    Pressure from the European Union and various human-rights groups
    helped secure this week's releases. And there are encouraging signs
    that Mr Erdogan may soon resume the reforms which once endeared him
    to Turkish liberals and his Western friends. These, Mr Sener noted,
    ought to include dealing with Turkey's prisons. Hundreds of minors
    had to be shipped out of one in the southern province of Adana this
    month following allegations of physical and sexual abuse.

    Life was not that bad for Mr Sener, although he did lose 30kg (66lb)
    inside. It was harder, he said, on his eight-year-old daughter, who
    was forced to remove her skirt when visiting him (its studs set off
    a metal detector). Police scoured her school notebooks for "evidence"
    against her father. "She kept asking, 'Am I a terrorist?'," Mr Sener
    said. In the eyes of Turkish prosecutors, she may well be.

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