New York, December 14, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is alarmed by the recent prosecution of journalists under laws that criminalize
comment about the Turkish state, its institutions, and history.
In the past three months, the authorities have used the catch-all provisions
of Article 301 of the penal code to stifle writing about the massacres
of Armenians by Ottoman Turkish forces 90 years ago, and articles critical
of the judiciary and the military. According to CPJ research at least
eight journalists have been convicted of, or face criminal charges, under
Article 301 despite official promises to end criminal prosecutions of
journalists.
"These prosecutions show that Turkey still has a long way to go to meet
its international obligations to reform restrictive media laws as it pursues
its application for membership of the European Union," said CPJ Executive
Director Ann Cooper. "We urge the authorities to accelerate the reform
of those laws and to drop criminal charges against journalists for their
reporting."
On December 2, 2005, an Istanbul state prosecutor charged five journalists
Murat Belge, Haluk Sahin, Erol Katircioglu and Ismet Berkan of the daily
Radikal, and Hasan Cemal of the daily Milliyetwith
violating Article 301. The article outlaws "public denigration of Turkishness,
the Republic, the Grand National Assembly of Turkey (Parliament) ... the
Government of the Republic of Turkey, the judicial institutions of the
State and the military or security structures."
If convicted, the journalists face between six months and 10 years in
jail. Their trial is scheduled to begin on February 7, 2006.
The charges stem from columns published in Radikal and Milliyet
that strongly criticized Turkish court rulings banning an academic conference
on the Armenian massacres. The court stopped the conference from taking
place at two Istanbul universities, once in May and again in September,
but organizers held the conference on September 24 by moving it to a third
university at the last minute, according to international press reports.
In October, an Istanbul criminal court sentenced Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief
of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, to a six-month suspended
term for violating Article 301. 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 authorities did not elaborate on what
they considered insulting in Dink's work. But Dink told CPJ at the time
that his conviction was, "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."
Armenians have sought for many years to have the international community
recognize the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
as the first genocide of the 20th century.
On November 16, 2005, the appeals court upheld the suspended 20-month
jail sentence of Burak Bekdil, a columnist for the English-language Turkish
Daily News, for a satirical article he wrote in August 2001 criticizing
Turkey's judicial system, according to news reports. He was convicted
under a law that that was replaced by Article 301.
Last week, a court in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir began hearing
a criminal case against Birol Duru, a correspondent for Dicle News Agency.
Duru is charged under article 301 with "public denigration of the military
or security structures" in response to an article he wrote which accused
Turkish security forces of burning forests in southeastern Turkey. According
to press reports and human rights organizations, Duru has been detained
since August 10, 2005, when he was in Dinabey village in the Yedisu district
investigating allegations that the local military commander grew cannabis
with villagers. The court denied Duru bail and adjourned until December
29, 2005.

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