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Turkey to change free speech law
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30. |
08 Jan 2008 Tue 08:37 pm |
Schism: Free Speech vs. 'Insulting Turkishness'
by Ivan Watson
Listen Now [4 min 2 sec]
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6196764
All Things Considered, October 4, 2006 · Acclaimed novelist Elif Safak was acquitted last week after being taking to trial for "insulting Turkishness" when a fictional character described the Armenian genocide in her latest book.
Armenian-Turkish newspaper editor Hrant Dink wasn't so lucky. He received a six-month suspended sentence for talking about the genocide, and faces two more trials for similar charges.
It may look like a battle over freedom of speech. In fact, the defendants say the Armenian Genocide, and the law that bans "insulting Turkishness," have become a political football between Turkish ultranationalists and pre-European politicians.
Anti-Turkish European politicians have entered the fray by passing laws forbidding citizens to deny that a genocide of Armenians took place in 1915.
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31. |
08 Jan 2008 Tue 08:41 pm |
FREEDOM OF OPINION IN TURKEY
Turkish Intellectuals Between Democracy and Nationalism
By Dilek Zaptcioglu in Istanbul
Turkish novelist Elif Shafak was taken to court on charges of "insulting Turkishness." It's a part of the Turkish penal code often used to go after intellectuals. But do the country's politicians have the courage to change it?
Turkish author Elif Shafak is just one of many intellectuals in Turkey who have run afoul of Section 301.
It's a scenario familiar to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Apply the criminal code to the work of a novelist, and massive protests from the European Union about the freedom of opinion in Turkey ensue. Indeed, Erdogan has been taking those protests to heart and has recently been trying to change the Turkish penal code's notorious section 301. In comments delivered on Thursday, Erdogan promised that the section will be deleted should a consensus be reached in parliament.
Such a consensus is not yet in sight. Novelist Elif Shafak was taken to court on charges of "insulting Turkishness" this week -- and acquitted for lack of evidence. So far, the most well-known victim of section 301 has been the editor-in-chief of the Armenian weekly Agos, Hrant Dink, who will be sentenced to six months in prison if he "re-offends."
Section 301 of Turkey's penal code makes "insulting Turkishness, the Republic or the National Assembly" punishable by a prison sentence of between six months and three years. The sentence increases threefold when the offense is committed abroad. The EU has been demanding the abolition of section 301 for months. Since the law went into effect about one year ago, it has been used to press charges against at least 82 writers, publishers, journalists and intellectuals. During the past 15 months, numerous periodicals and books have been confiscated, and Internet sites have been shut down, according to the most recent report by Turkey's Human Rights Foundation (TIHV). A total of 15 people have been sentenced under the law. It is widely expected that this year the European Union Commission will use its annual progress report on Turkey's fitness for EU membership -- due out in mid-October -- as an opportunity to demand a re-drafting of section 301.
But doing so would require a major transformation within Turkey, and that transformation has yet to occur. Danish Amnesty International member Elna Leth Pedersen, who monitored Shafak's trial, believes a "change of mentality" is needed. It won't do for the section to be scrapped and replaced by another, she believes.
"Many countries -- including EU countries -- have similar laws," says Joost Lagendijk, a member of the European Parliament, speaking in Istanbul on the day of Shafak's trial. "But these laws never lead to writers or journalists being arrested," Lagendijk adds.
Eugene Schoulgin, a representative of the PEN Club, the international writers association, has called Shafak's trial a "scandal" and pointed out that hers is not the only case his organization is keeping a watchful eye on. "There are genuine human rights violations occurring in various countries, from EU member states to Australia," says Schoulgin, a Norwegian who now lives in Istanbul. He adds that the rising number of trials in Turkey is to do with the country's "giant steps towards democracy," which he says are prompting strong nationalist reactions "in certain circles."
A Nationalist Backlash
In fact, the lawyers who always appear as joint plaintiffs in section 301 trials are genuinely reactionary. They are members of the far-right lawyers association "Hukukcular Birligi." Led by Istanbul lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz, they are often the ones who press charges against authors. In their eyes, sensitive topics include the massacre committed against Armenians in 1915, the Kurdish question, the role of the military in Turkey -- and recent Turkish history in general.
For the past several years, Turkey has been undergoing a rapid cultural transformation. Thanks to the country's bid for EU membership, Turkey's past and present is being discussed more openly and controversially than ever before. But this also entails a growing rift between reformist forces and the rest of society. Many feel the reforms are happening too quickly and going too far.
Formally left-wing and now liberal-minded intellectuals such as Murat Belge, a professor of English literature, are speeding the EU reform process in the area of culture. Today these intellectuals are no longer as marginalized as they were 10 or 20 years ago, when they found themselves unemployed because of their views or were struggling to survive in small publishing houses. Now they hold teaching positions at Istanbul's many private universities, where they are using their connections to organize conferences on the Armenian and Turkish questions.
Official Turkish historiography is the main target of the criticisms repeatedly formulated at these conferences. According to Belge, official Turkish historiography has "achieved nothing so far besides denying the Armenian and the Kurdish questions and falsifying historical truths for extremely nationalist reasons." Turkey's liberal intellectuals make up a kind of "closed society" entertaining close contacts to the West; their activities are often financed with Western funds.
The result is that Turkish nationalists have a bone to pick. They're using section 301 as a weapon and they want to use the charges of "insulting Turkishness" and "damaging Turkey's reputation abroad" to expose the activities of intellectuals and writers to the public. The goal pursued by Turkish nationalists isn't necessarily that of getting writers into prison. Rather, it's to make these writers look like dangerous enemies of society to those Turks who haven't read their books.
The strategy is working. Most Turks view Kerincsiz and his right-wing lawyers as slightly overzealous champions of a just cause. Widespread popular support for the extreme nationalists and their struggles against the "enemies of the people" is even pushing the social democrat opposition in the Turkish parliament to argue against the abolition of section 301.
Elections will be held in Turkey in the fall of 2007. Even Prime Minister Erdogan will likely lack the courage to fully liberalize the Turkish penal code. Right now Erdogan is smugly playing the role of the democrat whose hands are tied. All he did on the eve of Shafak's trial was wish her the best of luck.
P.S. Even though Safak has been found innocent by the court, the article 301 continues to be an important obstacle for the freedoom of speech in Turkey.
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32. |
08 Jan 2008 Tue 09:21 pm |
zbrct, reg. Elif Shafak:
http://www.turkishclass.com/forumTitle_23_25095_2
http://arts.independent.co.uk/books/features/article2806624.ece
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33. |
08 Jan 2008 Tue 11:56 pm |
Here you started again to sing the same old song. Telling about islamic Jihad theories in US , praising Adolf Hitler and his policies in Germany, a declaration against (so-called)Armenian Genocide in France and Switzerland. Aren't those a confinement reson in those countries ? If you don't beleive me , try those in somewhere out of your home and let's see the score all together. Things are not going through ranting like the way you do.
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34. |
09 Jan 2008 Wed 02:55 am |
Quoting E.T.K.O: Here you started again to sing the same old song. Telling about islamic Jihad theories in US , praising Adolf Hitler and his policies in Germany, a declaration against (so-called)Armenian Genocide in France and Switzerland. Aren't those a confinement reson in those countries ? If you don't beleive me , try those in somewhere out of your home and let's see the score all together. Things are not going through ranting like the way you do. |
and you, nationalist, always sing the same song that is anti-freedoom of speech.
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09 Jan 2008 Wed 03:09 am |
freedom to dress however u want.. *roll eyes*
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09 Jan 2008 Wed 03:28 am |
Quoting zettea: freedom to dress however u want.. *roll eyes* |
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09 Jan 2008 Wed 06:40 am |
Quoting GatewaytoTR: and you, nationalist, always sing the same song that is anti-freedoom of speech. |
There is no such thing like freedom of speech. It is Freedom of Expression. The European Convention on Human Rights specifies the definition and conditions of it.
ARTICLE 10
1- Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. this right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
2- The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or the rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.
Shortly this article signifies that you can express yourself without interference. But you are responsible from what you said and you have to put up with its outcome.
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09 Jan 2008 Wed 07:14 am |
Quoting E.T.K.O:
Shortly this article signifies that you can express yourself without interference. But you are responsible from what you said and you have to put up with its outcome.
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Everyone is responsible for what they say and I would rather have to "put up with the outcome" than have my freedom to express myself completely stifled.
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39. |
09 Jan 2008 Wed 08:21 am |
Quoting E.T.K.O: Shortly this article signifies that you can express yourself without interference. But you are responsible from what you said and you have to put up with its outcome. |
This is such a dumb word game. I don't know what articles there are or whatever you're quoting (next time if you want your quotes to be believable, provide the source), but the FACTS are that freedom of speech/expression, while not perfect, exists in the west, which cannot be said about Turkey. It is so blatantly obvious.
Of course people have to understand consequences of what they say, these consequences sometimes limit freedom, but sometimes they are there, like pissing off all your neighbors, or all muslims, or christians, or losing funding... whatever. The point is that the government CANNOT arrest people for expressing their thoughts and criticism!
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40. |
09 Jan 2008 Wed 10:24 am |
Having read through the links relating to the writer Elif Shafik and Dink, one thing keeps coming to mind: The endless criticism of writers, intellectuals, artists etc... by people who don't even read their works and learn anything about them.
Take a look at what is happening to poor ol' Fazil Say ! Opened his mouth to express his beliefs and now he will probably being chased out of the country. What a shame !
Turkey has produced countless geniuses, Turks with incredible artistic and academic abilities, Turks with a passion to teach their fellow country men and women, the freedom to meditate on, learn about, broaden knowledge of various subjects including the poitical, controversial and delicate ones.
I have seen countless amazing Turks leave this country because they are not accepted. With this attitude towards the educated, things cannot improve !
The ultimate reward for education is TOLERANCE !
What can we Turks do ?
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