Click here to read more about press freedom conditions in TURKEY
New
York, NY September 28, 2000 - A Turkish criminal court is expected
to issue a verdict tomorrow in the case of journalist Nadire Mater,
who faces up to twelve years in prison on charges of "insulting" the
powerful Turkish military. The charges stem from a book of interviews
Mater conducted with former conscripts in the civil conflict in southeastern
Turkey.
Author and journalist Kati Marton, a CPJ board member, will attend
Friday's hearing at the Beyoglu criminal court in Istanbul in a show
of solidarity with Mater.
Mater, a free-lance journalist who writes for the
news agency Inter Press Service (IPS), was charged last September
with two counts of "insulting" the Turkish military, a crime under
Article 159 of Turkey's Penal Code. If convicted, she faces between
two and twelve years in prison. Her publisher, Samih Sokmen, faces
a possible fine.
CPJ has been supporting Mater since her controversial Mehmed's
Book: Soldiers Who Have Fought in the Southeast Speak Out, was
banned on June 23, 1999. The book consists of interviews with
42 retired Turkish soldiers of the bloody civil conflict with Kurdish
insurgents that the Turkish government has waged for much of the last
15 years.
When she presented her defense to the court on August 24, Mater declared:
"The truth is plain to see. Banning the truth does not eradicate it."
The trial was attended by dozens of journalists and supporters, including
CPJ board member Peter Arnett and CPJ Mideast program coordinator
Joel Campagna.
END
Related Stories:
TURKEY:
Journalist
Appears in Court Posted
August 24, 2000 
Read an excerpt
from Mehmed's Book
Read Mater's personal statement