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  • Critics find fault with updated rule of law

    Critics find fault with updated rule of law
    by Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

    South China Morning Post
    June 2, 2005

    Turkey's first new criminal code in nearly 80 years went into effect
    yesterday in what Ankara hopes will be a major step towards opening
    accession proceedings with the European Union in October.

    Legal experts see the document as an improvement on its 1926
    predecessor, which was heavily indebted to 19th century Italian laws.

    Turkish women's rights activists have expressed overall satisfaction
    with new articles criminalising sexual harassment, virginity tests
    and rape within marriage.

    The code also drops articles prescribing shorter sentences for
    so-called honour killings. Every year, scores, if not hundreds,
    of Turkish women are murdered by their families for transgressing
    traditional codes of behaviour.

    In line with their new policy of zero tolerance, MPs have also
    increased the maximum penalty for torture from eight to 12 years.

    But as Amnesty International points out, time limits on torture cases,
    though extended, still stand. Facilitated by a notoriously inefficient
    judicial system, the deliberate delaying of trials until they are
    dropped is a common tactic.

    The new criminal code has been dogged by controversy since last autumn,
    when plans to criminalise adultery were dropped amid an international
    outcry.

    In recent days, government efforts to reduce penalties for illegal
    religious courses have sparked a furious debate in Turkey, fiercely
    attached to its secular identity.

    The controversy has served only to mask far more serious shortcomings
    in articles dealing with freedom of expression.

    Though plans envisaging higher sentences for "crimes" committed
    through the press were dropped last week, journalists still face
    prison sentences for reporting on anything from ongoing criminal
    investigations to "insult".

    Not only has a notorious article from the former code criminalising
    acts that "belittle" state institutions been transferred almost
    verbatim into today's version, critics say, entirely new restrictions
    have been added.

    Foremost is article 305, which prescribes up to 10 years' prison for
    Turks or foreigners acting "against the fundamental national interest",
    a vague term that could include advocating the withdrawal of Turkish
    troops from Cyprus or describing 1915 Armenian massacres as "genocide".

    Laws like this, says lawyer Yusuf Caglayan, "open the door to decisions
    that prove not the citizen's guilt, but the impossibility of proving
    his innocence".

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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