Turkey's Press Crackdown Continues

Trajan

conscientia mille testes
Jun 17, 2010
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The Bay Area Soviet
yea, well, they are shifting to a 'new paradigm' anyway so this fits right in. ;)



Turkey's Press Crackdown Continues
Journalists are being jailed for an alleged coup plot and we all assume our phones are tapped.
by ASLI AYDINTASBAS

Istanbul

This is what it is like to be a journalist in the world's "model Muslim democracy": Last week, on my first day back at the office after a vacation, I was planning to have lunch with my colleague Nedim Sener, a well-known investigative reporter whose desk at our newspaper, Milliyet, is near mine.

But Nedim wasn't at his desk on Thursday. It turned out he was among a group of journalists detained early in the morning for supposedly trying to overthrow the government.

Since 2007, more than a hundred uniformed and retired military officials, secular dissidents, journalists and academics have been arrested for allegedly belonging to a secret organization, Ergenekon, plotting to overthrow the government. Add in the widespread use of wiretaps, and you'll begin to get a sense of what it's like to be a journalist critical of the Turkish government. We live in an atmosphere of constant fear.

It is the Kafkaesque nature of these trials against journalists that kills me. It takes months before you see an indictment and years until your case is properly heard. Mustafa Balbay, a columnist for Turkey's foremost secular paper, Cumhuriyet, has been in jail for 730 days. He stands accused of helping the coup by deciding not to publish his off-the-record conversations with generals in 2003.

Our colleague Nedim has written award-winning books. One unearthed police misconduct in the 2007 assassination of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, and another exposed the influence of Fethullah Gulen—an Islamic preacher living in the United States—on Turkish security forces. For his investigative work, he was named World Press Freedom Hero by the International Press Institute in 2010.

Yet Nedim stands accused, along with Ahmet Sik, a fellow reporter and human rights activist, and journalists working for the antigovernment website Od********, of acting upon the orders of Ergenekon and working to create "the psychological environment" to further its goals. Right.

snip-

But over the past few years, democracy has been reduced to majoritarianism, and the media have become less and less free. Currently there are some 50 journalists and writers in jail, and nearly 4,000 pending lawsuits against journalists.

In 2007, the newspaper where I worked as the Ankara bureau chief, Sabah, was taken over by the government and sold to a businessman close to the government. The paper, once Turkey's second-largest daily, now doesn't publish a single item critical of the government.

In 2008, the Ergenekon investigations made it clear that the nation's most prominent Turkish journalists are routinely wiretapped. In 2009—the year when YouTube was banned in Turkey; it no longer is—a record tax fine of $3.5 billion (yes, billion) dollars was levied on Turkey's largest secular media group, Dogan Holding, after a public spat with the government. Everyone took this as a warning.

more at-
Aydintasbas: Turkey's Press Crackdown Continues - WSJ.com
 
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I am sure Ekrem will set us straight as to why that won't happen...and why the free press doesn't appear so free anymore....Live at 5 ;)
 
why the free press doesn't appear so free anymore....Live at 5 ;)

The loss of truth is the loss of rights. We see what is happening in Turkey. Regardless of the stuff ekrem spams.
 
why the free press doesn't appear so free anymore....Live at 5 ;)

The loss of truth is the loss of rights. We see what is happening in Turkey. Regardless of the stuff ekrem spams.
They bomb publishing houses that dare to publish books that disagree with the Turkish goverment, anyone who is declared an enemy of the state of the Turkish government is put in Jail or killed (especially in the case of Dink), it appears they will start doing the same to people wanting a more democratic Turkey and more civil liberties, and Turkish journalists reporting on subjects that put the government in bad light. If they really were planning a revolution to overthrow the Turkish government you can't blame them.
 
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allegedly belonging to a secret organization, Ergenekon

Felice Casson, the Italian Gladio-Prossecutor has arrested about 600 people. Including Journalists.

We can't tolerate power-structures outside of the constitution, who have weapon caches and are plotting to overthrow governments (people's will).

Gladio prosecutor Casson: Ergenekon-like organizations spread like cancer
Former Italian President Cossiga says Turkish Gladio was unique

If the arrested Journalists are not guilty, they will be released.
 
They bomb publishing houses that dare to publish books that disagree with the Turkish goverment, anyone who is declared an enemy of the state of the Turkish government is put in Jail or killed (especially in the case of Dink), it appears they will start doing the same to people wanting a more democratic Turkey and more civil liberties, and Turkish journalists reporting on subjects that put the government in bad light. If they really were planning a revolution to overthrow the Turkish government you can't blame them.

The Malatya killings of 3 Christians publishing and distributing Christian books are part of Ergenekon investigation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergenekon_(organization)
 
Currently there are some 50 journalists and writers in jail

From a total of about 400 people as part of Ergenekon investigation.
Chief Prosecutor is Zekeriya Oz.

There is seperation of powers. Ergenekon investigation is not being done by the Government, but by the Judiciary.
 
I am sorry, so quashing the press fits in this how?

The journalists are detained as part of belonging to a terrorist organization (Ergenekon).
If they are not guilty, they'll be released.

jackass.jpg

All those journalists are now terrorists.

Arggh Billy.

Have ye evar been ta sea?
 
As the islamist gain power, people will lose more and more of their freedoms. Turkey is muslim utopia waiting to happen :eusa_shhh:
 
As the islamist gain power, people will lose more and more of their freedoms. Turkey is muslim utopia waiting to happen :eusa_shhh:

If it were not 50 Journalists, which are detained, but 50 newspapers being closed down, I would agree with you.


The Guy in the middle Top is a senior Journalist of a newspaper. He is also detained.
Investigations are ongoing, and the terrorist cell has a civilian "Wing".
I trust the judiciary, and if people are detained wrongly, they'll have to be compensated for being arrested during the investigation.
http://www.fas.org/irp/world/turkey/ergenekon.pdf
ek1.jpg
 
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Main Charges

- Attempting to destroy the Turkish Parliament and blocking it from performing its duties
- Setting up and leading a terror organization attempting to destroy the government of the
Republic of Turkey or blocking it from performing its duties
- Inciting people to hatred and enmity
- Inciting people to armed rebellion against the government
- Planning to wiretap illegally
- Acquiring, stocking, and using explosives and urging others to commit crimes using explosives
- Accessing classified documents regarding state security
- Recording personal data through illegal means
- Provoking military disobedience

http://www.fas.org/irp/world/turkey/ergenekon.pdf
 
If they want to make "Patriot Act"-wiretapping and engage in "embedded journalism" to propagandize society into hate, they should move to USA.

Here in Turkey, we still want to live in a clean society.
 
If they want to make "Patriot Act"-wiretapping and engage in "embedded journalism" to propagandize society into hate, they should move to USA.

Here in Turkey, we still want to live in a clean society.
Turkey has never been a clean society, even in Ottoman times, and Turkey already lives in an atmosphere of hate and fear. By banning expressions of Kurdish identity, and restricting rights of minorities you merely fuel the PKK and other insurgent groups, and make it more likely that Turkey will divide along racial lines in the far (or near by worst estimates) in the future, even if you are to put the conflict along the lines of Basque rebels in Spain.

Also Turkish nationalists have far too strong a hold on society, along with Islamists, making it impossible to improve civil rights, put an end to human rights abuses and build a multi-cultural society along modern lines. It is also rather racist and derogatory to make Turkish citizenship into a race based thing rather than just citizenship like every other country in the world.

Turkey is not a very clean society at all, and that is before you cover the diplomatic issues between Turkey and Armenia over the past. Thanks to Turkish and Armenian Nationalists working together the protocols were a disastrous failure, the border opening would have benefited both countries by linking Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey together, trade ties would have gradually improved relations. As for the Genocide issue, I think it could be easily resolved by the Turkish banks giving back the money deposited during ww1 to the relatives, that would calm the issue down.
 

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