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Turkey's 15 minutes of free expression are over

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  • Turkey's 15 minutes of free expression are over

    The Globe & Mail, Canada
    May 2 2014


    Turkey's 15 minutes of free expression are over Add to ...

    Amberin Zaman

    Saturday, May 3, is World Press Freedom Day. Amberin Zaman is an
    Istanbul-based columnist for the independent Turkish daily newspaper
    Taraf.

    April 24 marked the 99th anniversary of the beginning of the Armenian
    Genocide. Civilitas, an Armenian NGO, was providing live coverage of a
    slew of commemoration events in Istanbul - until recently, it would
    have been unthinkable for Turks to pay homage to the victims, as
    discussion of the genocide was taboo.

    I navigated to Civilitas to watch their webcast from Taksim Square. A
    dull gray window covered with legalese popped up, reminding me that
    access to YouTube remains banned.

    Welcome to the new Turkey, where freedom of expression is shrinking by
    the day and which has more journalists in jail than China or Iran do.

    Over the past year, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has overseen
    the brutal suppression of mass demonstrations and rammed through
    controversial laws that augment the powers of the national spy agency
    and censorship of the Internet.

    The bulk of these appear to be designed to stifle further
    investigation (and debate) of the massive corruption scandal
    implicating Mr. Erdogan's family and close circles, and to ease his
    path to the presidency when incumbent Abdullah Gul steps down in
    August. Mr. Erdogan's threats against his perceived enemies have grown
    louder since his neo-Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP)
    thrashed its secular rivals in the March 30 municipal polls.

    Is Turkey on the path to becoming another Russia and Mr. Erdogan
    another Vladimir Putin? This question is frequently asked these days.

    It is easy to forget that Mr. Erdogan was not always a bully and that
    Turkey has never been fully free. Over the past half-century, the army
    has overthrown four democratically elected governments, and until a
    few years ago, many newspaper owners and editors toadied up to the
    generals, just as they do to Mr. Erdogan today. Turkey's uneasy march
    toward democracy was long best described as one step forward, two
    steps back.

    After he and the AKP shot to power in 2002, Mr. Erdogan introduced
    sweeping reforms, chipping away at the army's influence, reaching out
    to the Kurds, building new schools and hospitals and transforming
    Turkey into a freer, richer place. True, his conservative views caused
    the occasional blip, as when he tried to criminalize adultery. But for
    the first time, reform outpaced repression and the European Union was
    shamed into opening membership talks with Turkey in 2005, its first
    with any majority Muslim country.

    It was against this backdrop that, in a 2005 interview with Yeni
    Safak, a respected pro-Islamic daily newspaper with close ties to the
    government, I marvelled about feeling truly free as a journalist, with
    no worries about whether my words would land me in trouble, as they so
    often had in the past.

    Today, as my Twitter feed is inundated with reports of Mr. Erdogan's
    latest excesses as well as threats to "rape" and "kill" me over my
    critical coverage, it's almost as if those days never existed. These
    days, repression has overtaken reform, and honest reporting comes at a
    price.

    While it is possible now to write about the Armenian Genocide and to
    defend the Kurds, it is not acceptable to question Mr. Erdogan's Syria
    policy (in my view, disastrous) or to mention government-linked
    corruption.

    The red lines have merely shifted. They used to be defined by the
    generals; now they are defined by Mr. Erdogan.

    Any journalist who dares to breach them can end up without a job, as I
    did last year when Haberturk, a mainstream Turkish newspaper that
    published my biweekly column, sacked me for ignoring editors' warnings
    about my tone. They were bowing to pressure from the Prime Minister's
    office. "Can't you write about Uruguay or something?" one of my
    editors had pleaded. Newspaper owners who do not toe the official line
    are slapped with arbitrary tax fines, cut out of lucrative state
    contracts, even scolded by Mr. Erdogan himself.

    It is tempting to imagine that once Mr. Erdogan leaves power, Turkey
    will revert to "normal." Such thinking ignores why he continues to be
    so popular at the ballot box.

    The reason is that most of the people who vote for him care more about
    economic prosperity than they do about access to YouTube. Mr. Erdogan
    has improved their living standards and his opponents have failed to
    convince voters that they can do better. Yet, in Turkey's polarized
    atmosphere, to give the Prime Minister credit for past achievements is
    to risk losing your friends.

    Indeed, this peer pressure is almost as much a challenge as pressure
    from the state. You have to either love Mr. Erdogan or hate him. And
    this speaks to the lack of tolerance in Turkish society as a whole.

    Mr. Erdogan is not a dictator - he is a big disappointment. He had the
    chance to break with the authoritarianism of the past. Instead, he has
    embraced it.

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/turkeys-15-minutes-of-free-expression-are-over/article18372818/




    From: A. Papazian
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