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Ankara Aims To Amend Article 301 Before Summit

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  • Ankara Aims To Amend Article 301 Before Summit

    ANKARA AIMS TO AMEND ARTICLE 301 BEFORE SUMMIT

    Gulf Times, Qatar
    Nov 16 2006

    ANKARA: Turkey plans to amend a controversial law condemned by the
    European Union for curbing freedom of expression in time for an EU
    summit in mid-December, officials said yesterday.

    Article 301 makes it a crime to insult "Turkishness" or state
    institutions. Nationalist lawyers have used it to prosecute writers
    and intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk, although
    most cases have ended in acquittal.

    In its annual report on Turkey's reforms last week, the European
    Commission repeated its criticism of the article and urged the
    government to amend or repeal it.

    "This amendment has to be made and benefit is seen in making it as
    soon as possible. We aim to pass the amendment through parliament
    in the first week of December," an official from the ruling AK Party
    told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

    EU leaders will discuss the fate of Turkey's EU candidacy at a December
    14-15 summit after concern over a slowdown in reforms and a row over
    Cyprus, whose government Ankara does not recognise. Turkey began EU
    entry talks a year ago.

    Political analysts say Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who faces
    elections next year, hopes that by amending article 301 he can gain
    credit in Brussels and make the EU less willing to punish Turkey over
    its Cyprus policy.

    AK Party sources said they and the Justice Ministry were exploring
    new forms of wording that would make it more difficult for politically
    motivated lawyers to bring cases to court.

    The aim of the amendment will be to protect people's legitimate right
    to criticise while discouraging insults that upset Turkish public
    opinion, AK Party officials said.

    Non-governmental organisations, including business groups and trade
    unions, are also drawing up joint proposals for changes they plan to
    submit to the government by tomorrow.

    The head of the Turkish Doctors' Union, one of the NGOs involved, said
    his group favoured complete abolition of the article but added: "The
    government is not planning change of that magnitude at this point."

    Speaking in Stockholm yesterday, Turkey's EU chief negotiator Ali
    Babacan noted the strength of opposition to change inside parliament,
    despite the AK Party's big majority, and said the support of the NGOs
    would be crucial.

    "If a serious, concrete demand comes from civil society it will be
    easier for us to look into this situation," he said.

    Pamuk was charged under article 301 over comments he made about the
    alleged genocide of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I.

    Pamuk's case collapsed on a technicality.

    Turkey strongly denies the genocide claims. It says large numbers
    of Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks died in a partisan conflict
    accompanying the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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