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  • Flying insults

    Turkey and free speech

    Flying insults

    Jul 27th 2006 | ANKARA
    >From The Economist print edition


    Another writer, another prosecution for insulting Turkey

    A WILLOWY blonde, as fluent in Spanish and English as in her native Turkish,
    Elif Shafak should be a poster girl for Turkey's push to join Europe. Yet
    most Europeans will become familiar with this award-winning novelist only
    when she stands trial (by then heavily pregnant) later this year for
    "denigrating Turkishness" in her latest novel, "The Bastard of Istanbul". A
    fictional Armenian character's musings about the mass slaughter of the
    Ottoman Armenians in 1915 may yet land Mrs Shafak in jail for as long as
    three years.

    If so, she will have lots of company. The Turkish Publishers' Association
    says that 47 writers face prosecution, on charges ranging from insulting the
    father of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk, to defending conscientious objection
    (though Perihan Magden, another woman novelist, was acquitted on this charge
    on July 27th). Earlier this month, a high court confirmed a six-month jail
    sentence handed down to Hrant Dink, a newspaper publisher, for an article in
    which he exhorted fellow Armenians to expunge themselves of their hatred of
    Turks. That too was construed as an insult to Turks.

    Joost Lagendijk, a Dutch member of the European Parliament, has noted that
    the clampdown on free expression, together with Cyprus and the Kurds,
    constitute "the biggest obstacle" to Turkey's hopes of joining the EU.
    Ironically, Mr Lagendijk was himself investigated earlier this year for
    "insulting Turkey".

    Leading the drive to muzzle free speech is an ultra-nationalist lawyer,
    Kemal Kerincsiz. He brought a case against Turkey's best-known author, Orhan
    Pamuk, which was dismissed in January. A rise in nationalist sentiment has
    allowed Mr Kerincsiz to keep hounding writers such as Mrs Shafak. Some think
    he is an agent of the "deep state", a shadowy coalition of rogue members of
    the security establishment who allegedly oppose Turkey's EU aspirations.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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