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  • Ankara: Armenians Said Targeted Most By Turkish Media

    ARMENIANS SAID TARGETED MOST BY TURKISH MEDIA

    Today's Zaman
    Dec 6 2012
    Turkey

    6 December 2012 , Istanbul: Armenians abroad and Turkey's Armenian
    community were the most targeted communities in articles or news
    items that are considered to be hate-speech between May and August
    2012, according to a recent report from the Hrant Dink Foundation,
    released on Thursday.

    The Hrant Dink Foundation regularly monitors the media for stories
    that target religious and ethnic minorities, or other disadvantaged
    groups such as the disabled or non-heterosexual individuals. Between
    August and May this year, there were 101 op-ed columns and news
    articles identified by the foundation's experts as targeting national,
    ethnic and religious groups. There were 35 items targeting women and
    individuals with sexual orientations that differ from the general
    population.

    The report found that the number of groups targeted went down to
    15 communities from 17 in the first two reports. The majority of
    the content that contains hate speech was from the national press,
    the report found. Some 82 per cent of items classified as containing
    hate speech, was found in national media. The remaining 18 per cent
    came from local newspapers. Also, the report found that the majority
    of hate speech is disseminated in the work of columnists.

    in the period between May-August, the groups that were targeted most
    often were, respectively, Armenians, Christians, Jews and Greeks,
    the report said. It noted, "Out of this group, the aspect that stood
    out the most in terms of hate speech towards Armenians, which we
    may identify as a fixed category, was their association with the
    [terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party] PKK within the context of the
    recently intensifying conflict. This discourse, produced through
    an understanding that "Muslim Kurds are harmless and the PKK is an
    Armenian movement," was also seen to be reproduced at times with
    content targeting Christians and Jews. However, the most dominant
    assertion was that of Armenians supporting the PKK, looking for
    opportunities to harm Turkey, the "eternal enemy," and being a risk
    factor."

    The report also found that the number of stories and columns using
    hate speech against Kurds is increasing. "This increase was observed
    to coincide with the months of July and August, when armed conflict
    intensified, and the Kurdish people were noted as having been charged
    within the context of the clashes with the PKK. In this kind of
    content, the issue was reduced to "Kurdish terror," either implying
    that "patience was running thin" or creating enmity by attributing
    the issue to the Kurdish people."

    in addition to religious or ethnic minorities, the report found 35
    items that employed hate speech directed at the Lesbian, Bisexual,
    Gay and Transgender (LBGT) community. In addition, the report says the
    Turkish press in its representations of transvestites and transsexuals
    associates these individuals with "crime" and "social unrest."

    The report said newspapers that gave the most space to hate speech
    in the May-August period, not unlike in previous periods, were those
    with a nationalist-conservative editorial line, with Milli Gazete,
    Yeni Akit, Ortadogu, Yenicag and Yeni Mesaj newspapers once again being
    the publications with the most frequent occurrences of hate speech.

    The Hrant Dink Foundation has been monitoring the media for hate
    speech since 2009. It says its main purpose is to combat racism,
    discrimination and intolerance in Turkey. The foundation monitored
    approximately 1,000 local newspapers and all national newspapers
    through the Media Monitoring Centre using various key strings (such as
    collaborator, Turcophobe, separatist etc.). In addition to the keyword
    alerts, 16 newspapers, chosen in line with their circulation volume,
    are read and manually monitored as part of the foundation's hate-speech
    watch efforts. The news is evaluated on the basis of four categories
    of hate speech. The first category of "Exaggeration/attribution
    /distortion" involves negative stereotyping and distortion. The second
    category of "Blasphemy / insult / degradation," includes the direct use
    of denigrating or obscene words towards the targeted group. The third
    category, "Enmity/war discourse," is any item that contains hostility
    and war-mongering expressions about a community. The fourth category,
    with the difficult name of "Use of inherent identity as an element
    of hate or humiliation / symbolization," contains discourses where
    the attributes of a person acquired from birth are used to humiliate
    a person.

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