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Turkish Author Cleared Of Turning People Against Military

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  • Turkish Author Cleared Of Turning People Against Military

    Turkish Author Cleared Of Turning People Against Military

    Easy Bourse (Communiques de presse), France
    July 27, 2006

    ANKARA (AP)--A court Thursday acquitted a Turkish author of charges she
    turned people against military service by defending a conscientious
    objector in a weekly magazine column - a decision rights groups
    hailed as a victory for freedom of expression. A court in Istanbul
    ruled Perihan Magden's article amounted to "heavy criticism conveyed
    within the scope of freedom of expression" and didn't constitute
    a crime. Magden was among a string of writers and journalists
    to stand trial for expressing opinions, despite pressure from the
    European Union, which Turkey hopes to join, to scrap repressive laws
    and improve freedoms. She is the second person to be acquitted in
    recent months. In November, a court acquitted Internet journalist
    Rahmi Yildirim of charges of insulting the military. In her column,
    published in the weekly Yeni Aktuel magazine in December, Magden
    defended conscientious objector Mehmet Tarhan who was sentenced to
    four-years in a military prison for disobedience after he refused to
    wear his military uniform. She argued Turkey needed to establish a
    civilian service as an alternative to compulsory military conscription.

    Conscription in Turkey is obligatory for men over 20, and the country
    doesn't recognize the right to conscientious objection. Objectors
    have also been prosecuted on charges of turning people against
    the military. Had she been convicted, Magden faced up to three
    years in prison. The lack of "press freedoms had become unbearable
    in recent months and put Turkey in a humiliating position," said
    Ahmet Abakay, the head of the Contemporary Journalists' Association.

    "I want to congratulate the judge that gave this decision. It should
    be an example to other judges and prosecutors." Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan's government has said it has no plans to change such
    laws, saying where appropriate the charges are eventually dropped and
    defendants are acquitted. E.U. officials argue, however, that even
    if the charges are dropped the threat of prosecution deters people
    from expressing opinions. Late last year, a court dropped charges
    against novelist Orhan Pamuk, who faced trial on charges of insulting
    "Turkishness" for commenting on the mass killings of Armenians by
    Turks around the time of World War I. The charges were dropped for
    technical reasons amid intense international pressure. Earlier this
    month a high court confirmed a six-month prison sentence imposed on
    Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for attempting to influence
    the judiciary after his newspaper criticized the law that makes it
    a crime to insult Turkishness. Dink's sentence, however, was suspended.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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