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Why the writers refuse to be silenced

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  • Why the writers refuse to be silenced

    Financial Times, UK
    Oct 12 2006

    Why the writers refuse to be silenced



    Perihan Magden, a Turkish novelist and journalist, appeared in an
    Istanbul court earlier this month accused of the slightly surreal
    crime of "alienating the people against military service" because she
    defended a young man's right to be a conscientious objector.

    As she entered the court she was attacked by a small crowd of
    demonstrators shouting insults and causing a commotion that at least
    guaranteed television news coverage.

    It was a scene that has become familiar outside Turkish courtrooms. A
    series of prosecutions of writers and journalists, for things they
    said or wrote, has attracted bigots and xenophobes to each hearing,
    adding a sharp political edge to the occasions and turning them into
    spectacles that would be considered in some other countries to be
    bringing the law into disrepute.

    Ms Magden's case was adjourned to another hearing in late July. She
    faces three years in jail if she is convicted. "I cannot believe I am
    being prosecuted," she said in court.

    Her alleged crime was to write an opinion piece in a magazine in
    which she defended the notion of conscientious objection to military
    service, arguing in favour of a young man who was refusing to wear
    the uniform during his conscription because it was against his
    beliefs.

    The Turkish military, a powerful institution with a long history of
    meddling in politics and silencing its critics, objected to the
    article, arguing that it could undermine the standing of the armed
    forces in the public mind and perhaps encourage youngsters to refuse
    military service, which is compulsory for men.

    The notion is absurd in a country where the armed forces are, on the
    whole, highly regarded, and where military service is seen as a badge
    of honour. But a prosecutor filed a case against Ms Magden, and it is
    now being played out in court.

    If Ms Magden thinks the case is absurd, many Turks would probably
    agree. So would the European Union, which Turkey wishes to join. The
    EU has put freedom of expression high on its list of issues Turkey
    must address if any progress on entry is to be made.

    In particular, the EU wants Turkey to change or abolish Article 301
    of the revised penal code passed by this government, which is seen as
    a license for any prosecutor to pursue a case against an individual
    based on the flimsiest evidence.

    The furore that invariably surrounds the prosecution of freedom of
    expression cases in Turkey does immense damage to the country's image
    at home and abroad.

    This raises the intriguing question of why Turkey, which is a modern
    democracy with a pluralist media and no shortage of opinions on every
    conceivable subject, still puts writers and journalists on trial, and
    why such a powerful country is still so seemingly terrified of
    wayward, unorthodox, or subversive yet non-violent opinion.

    One reason, commentators say, is because the legal system tolerates
    it. Although a constitution drafted by the military top brass and
    imposed after a coup d'etat in 1980 has been heavily amended, its
    legacy has been pernicious and authoritarian.

    Even today, commentators and diplomats say, vaguely worded articles
    allow for severe restrictions on freedom of expression. These
    restrictions are less draconian than a decade ago, but they are still
    effective in making a writer think twice before putting an opinion
    down on paper.

    Much of the impetus for prosecutors to pursue writers who might be
    considered to have insulted Turkey in some way comes from the
    hard-line, xenophobic nationalist extremes of Turkish politics.

    This is not a large group but it is exceptionally noisy perhaps
    because it feels itself alienated from the modern trend of Turkish
    politics and it uses the legal system to announce and pursue its
    grievances.

    "Nationalists are feeling besieged," says Ali Tekin, a political
    scientist at Bilkent University. "When they see an avenue to express
    their frustration, they seize it."

    A second reason is that, although debate on contested historical
    questions is now more open in Turkey than it was five years ago, some
    subjects are still regarded by some Turks as taboo, such as the fate
    of Ottoman Armenians, the plight of the Kurds, or the continuing
    usefulness of Kemalism, the republican nationalist ideology
    bequeathed by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of Turkey. Those who
    would silence debate on these issues say European countries do the
    same thing.

    They point to Austria, which jailed David Irving a British historian
    who denied the Nazi Holocaust for three years.

    That is a more severe sentence than any handed down in recent months
    by a Turkish court. The saving grace of Turkish cases is that many
    are either withdrawn or collapse under the weight of contradictions.

    A third, and perhaps more important, reason why freedom of expression
    is so sensitive in Turkey is that it is a country where opinions are
    important, especially if they challenge received wisdom.

    The columnist Cengiz Candar has described Turkish intellectuals as
    "iconoclasts in a conservative society", holding Turkey to account on
    behalf of the world. There is a vast amount of opinion in Turkish
    newspapers, sometimes at the expense of news, but it plays a vital
    role in shaping public opinion.

    Orhan Pamuk, the novelist whose trial last December on a charge of
    "insulting Turkishness" led to an international outcry, recently made
    a similar point about writers.

    He told a conference of PEN, the international writers' organisation,
    that part of a writer's task was to raise forbidden subjects "purely
    because they wereforbidden".

    In his PEN lecture published in the New York Review of Books, from
    which these quotations are taken, he recalled a visit to Istanbul in
    the mid-1980s by the playwrights Arthur Miller and Harold Pinter, to
    show support for jailed writers in Turkey.

    Things are not that bad today. But Mr Pamuk observed that for a
    writer to self-censor himself simply to avoid upsetting anybody was
    "a bit like smuggling forbidden goods through customs" and was
    shaming and degrading.

    He has refused to be silenced in his own writings. Other Turkish
    writers, as Ms Magden shows, feel the same way.
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