New York, October 12, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the conviction of a Turkish-Armenian journalist on a charge of
"insulting and weakening Turkish identity through the media" An Istanbul
court on Friday sentenced Hrant Dink, 52, editor-in-chief of the bilingual
Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, to a six-month suspended term. Dink
and his lawyer, Fethiye Cetin, plan to appeal.
The charges stemmed from a series of articles Dink wrote in early 2004
dealing with the collective memory of the Armenian massacres of 1915-1917
under the Ottoman Empire. He called on Armenians to move beyond historical
anger toward Turks and "turn to the new blood of independent Armenia."
Turkish law, even under recent legal reforms, allows for journalists to
be criminally prosecuted and imprisoned for their work. Dink was prosecuted
under a provision of the new penal code that states: "A person who insults
Turkishness, the Republic, or the Turkish Parliament will be punished
with imprisonment ranging from six months to three years." Turkish authorities
did not elaborate on what they considered insulting in Dink's work.
Dink, who founded Agos in 1996, was sentenced the same week talks
began on Turkey's application to join the European Union.
"This is a political decision because I wrote about the Armenian genocide
and they detest that, so they found a way to accuse me of insulting Turks,"
Dink told CPJ. He said he is prepared to take the case to the European
Court of Human Rights to clear his name.
Turkey does not acknowledge as genocide the killings of Armenians by Ottoman
Turks at the beginning of the 20th century. The European Parliament has
conditioned Turkey's entry to the EU on its formal recognition of the
killings as genocide.
"Despite official promises, Turkish journalists continue to be criminally
prosecuted for their work," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "At
the heart of this case are the dozens of laws in Turkey that can make
free expression a crime. Free expression will remain limited in Turkey
as long as these laws are on the books."
Award-winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was indicted in September under
the same penal code provision after an interview he gave to a Swiss magazine
earlier this year in which he said, "one million Armenians were killed
in Turkey." His trial is set for December 17.
Dink faces additional charges for making critical comments at a 2002 human
rights conference about Turkey's national anthem and a daily oath taken
by Turkish schoolchildren in which they say, "Happy is the one who says,
'I am a Turk.' " Dink said then that he did not feel like a Turk, but
like an Armenian who is a citizen of Turkey. He will appear in court in
February for those remarks.

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