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Silencing A Secularist In Turkey: Erdogan Has Abandoned His Moderate

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  • Silencing A Secularist In Turkey: Erdogan Has Abandoned His Moderate

    SILENCING A SECULARIST IN TURKEY: ERDOGAN HAS ABANDONED HIS MODERATE FACADE

    The Washington Times
    August 8, 2013 Thursday

    By Sam Nunberg SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES

    The Turkish criminal courts have increasingly been used to further
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Islamist agenda through
    hate-speech prosecutions. The May 22 sentencing of Turkish-Armenian
    Sevan Nisanyan continues this disturbing trend of strangling political
    and social discourse.

    Mr. Nisanyan is a man of many interests and talents. Linguist,
    journalist and hotel entrepreneur, Mr. Nisanyan is not only
    known for his guidebook to small, affordable hotels in Turkey,
    but also was awarded the 2004 Freedom of Thought Award by Turkey's
    Human Rights Association for advocating the open discussion on the
    Armenian genocide. In 2008, he authored "The Mistaken Republic: 51
    Questions about Ataturk and Kemalism," arguing that Turkey's founder,
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, established a fascist dictatorship under the
    guise of nationalism. Mr. Nisanyan continues to frequently publish
    witty critical posts against the authoritarian bodies of the Turkish
    government on his blog, often with direct critiques on the Erdogan
    regime.

    Following the worldwide protests last September by Muslims enraged by
    the release of the satirical YouTube film "The Innocence of Muslims,"
    Mr. Nisanyan argued in a Sept. 29 post that such discourse should
    not be criminalized. While mocking Muhammad is "ugly," it does not
    constitute a "hate crime." Putting emphasis on the distinction, Mr.

    Nisanyan wrote:

    "Mocking an Arab leader - who claimed that he contacted God hundreds
    of years ago and who gained political, financial and sexual profit
    from this - is not a hate crime. Almost at the level of kindergarten,
    it is a test case of the thing called 'freedom of expression.'"

    Mr. Nisanyan subsequently explained that his 377-word posting was
    spawned by Mr. Erdogan's uproar over "that cheapo Muhammad film"
    and his demand that the West recognize "Islamophobia as a crime
    against humanity."

    The post not only prompted 15 separate criminal complaints, but
    Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag, an Erdogan confidant, called on
    prosecutors to launch an investigation. Breeching the sovereignty of
    the Turkish judiciary, he declared, "I'm announcing a crime. This is
    a typical hate crime. It is a hate crime, and it is a crime that is
    defined in our penal code."

    On Oct. 15, Mr. Nisanyan appeared on CNN Turk's "Contrary to the
    Questions" to discuss the "The Innocence of Muslims" riots and the
    Turkish government's denouncements of the film. The Supreme Board of
    Radio and Television fined the private broadcast on the grounds that
    Mr. Nisanyan's comments "insulted the Prophet Muhammad," "exceeded the
    boundaries of freedom of expression" and were "insulting and injurious"
    to society.

    In April, a month before Mr. Nisanyan's trial, world-renowned pianist
    Fazil Say was handed a 10-month suspended jail sentence under Article
    216(3) for tweets made in jest about a call to prayer and heaven. On
    April 15, European Union foreign-policy chief Catherine Ashton's
    office criticized Mr. Say's sentence, calling for Turkey "to fully
    respect freedom of expression." Three days later, Mr. Bozdag defended
    the conviction because Mr. Say "was swearing at someone's values," and
    "[n]obody should confuse freedom of thought with freedom of swearing."

    With both Mr. Bozdag's public declaration of Mr. Nisanyan's guilt and
    endorsement of the Say verdict, combined with the radio-TV board's
    ruling, Mr. Nisanyan could not expect an impartial trial. Prosecuted
    under Turkish Criminal Code Article 216(3), which declares, "Any person
    who openly disrespects the religious belief of a group is punished
    with imprisonment from six months to one year if such act causes
    potential risk for public peace," the magistrate judge of course found
    Mr. Nisanyan guilty, sentencing him to a 13½-month prison sentence,
    six weeks beyond the statutorily permissible punishment.

    Currently appealing his conviction in the Court of Cessation, Mr.

    Nisanyan will have to serve the entire jail sentence should the
    magistrate's sentence be upheld. The sentence violates the European
    Convention on Human Rights' Article 6 (right to a fair trial) and
    Article 10 (freedom of expression). Mr. Nisanyan's next best course
    is an appeal with the European Court of Human Rights.

    Reporters Without Borders immediately condemned the sentence as a
    "grave violation of freedom of information" and called for the
    immediate repeal of the "draconian" Article 216(3), which "has no
    place in a secular country such as Turkey."

    While the Turkish government is secular, the Erdogan regime is not.

    Following his narrow 2002 victory, Mr. Erdogan declared, "Secularism
    is the protector of all beliefs and religions. We are the guarantors
    of this secularism, and our management will clearly prove that." Now
    in the 11th year of his rule, Mr. Erdogan has abandoned any moderate
    facade.

    Neither the State Department nor any EU agency has issued a statement
    about Mr. Nisanyan's plight. At this critical juncture, human rights
    organizations should file appeals on his behalf in the European Court
    of Human Rights. It is imperative that the international community
    become engaged; otherwise, opinions will continue to be criminalized
    by the Erdogan regime.

    Sam Nunberg serves as director of the Legal Project, an activity of
    the Middle East Forum.

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/aug/8/nunberg-silencing-a-secularist-in-turkey/

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