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> Turkey To Change Law Curbing Free Speech, Infamous Article 301 to go
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post 11/09/07 08:54 AM
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By SELCAN HACAOGLU, Associated Press Writer
Tue Nov 6, 2:00 PM ET



ANKARA - Turkey's government will change a law that was used to prosecute a Nobel laureate for insulting Turkish identity, the justice minister said Tuesday, bowing to EU concerns that it overly curbed free speech.

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Turkey, which hopes to join the European Union, will soften the law, which makes denigrating Turkish identity, or insulting the country's institutions, a crime punishable by up to three years in prison. The European Union has said it does not fit within the bloc's standards of free speech, and has been one of the stumbling blocks to Turkish accession since talks began in 2005.

The Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk was among the highest profile Turks snared by the law, when he commented on the mass killings of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century. Turkey contends the death toll has been inflated and the deaths were the result of civil unrest, not genocide.

"The amendment has been completed and will be brought to parliament soon," private NTV and CNN-Turk televisions quoted Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin as saying.

The measure is likely to pass parliament, where Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's party has a majority.

The announcement came just hours after the EU reiterated its concerns about the law in its annual report.

"It is not acceptable that writers, journalists, academics and other intellectuals ... are prosecuted for simply expressing a critical but completely nonviolent opinion," EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said when presenting the report on Turkey.

"The infamous Article 301 must be repealed or amended without delay," Rehn said.

In addition to Pamuk, numerous other writers, journalists and academics have also been prosecuted under the law.

Hrant Dink, the ethnic Armenian journalist who was the editor of the minority Agos newspaper, was shot outside his Istanbul office on Jan. 19, following his prosecution for comments he made about the killings of Armenians. His murder revived a debate about the law, and many said his prosecution made him a target for radical nationalists. Tens of thousands turned out for his funeral, but many other Turks viewed him as an irritant whose commentaries were objectionable.

Turkish leaders have said the law was damaging Turkey's image by portraying it as a country where intellectuals are jailed for speaking their opinions.

Given the sensitivity of the debate over the law, it is unlikely it will be dropped entirely, but the decision to amend it indicates it will be softened to restrict its interpretation by prosecutors.

The law was just one of the concerns the EU mentioned in its report, which noted that the pace of reforms in Turkey has slowed recently. The bloc said Turkey must normalize its relations with EU member Cyprus and honor a 2005 pact to open its ports and airports to the island republic.

Cyprus has been divided between a Greek Cypriot south and a Turkish-occupied north since 1974, when Turkey invaded after an abortive Athens-backed coup by supporters of union with Greece.

Only the Greek south has EU benefits, and Ankara has said it will not agree to any concessions on Cyprus until the EU keeps to ends the isolation of Turkish Cypriots.

The report praised Turkey's economic reforms but chided authorities for their approach to minority rights, which it said has remained "unchanged" over the past year.

In the southeast of the country, "Turkey needs to create the conditions for the predominantly Kurdish population there to enjoy full rights and freedoms," said the report, which was published as Turkey considers military moves against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq. The rebels have killed more than 40 Turks in cross-border raids in the past month.
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post 11/13/07 04:52 AM
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Article 301 is direct copy from French law of meida and German law of public declerations. I posted those laws a few times on these forums and I am too lazy to post again.

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Hosank
post 11/13/07 12:46 PM
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QUOTE
Article 301 is direct copy from French law of meida and German law of public declerations.


hmm not exactly but quite similar i must admit. i agree also that these laws should also be abolished. many political scientists have observed that france and turkey resemble 2 sides of the same coin.
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post 11/14/07 03:44 AM
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QUOTE(Hosank @ 11/13/07 08:46 PM) [snapback]117399[/snapback]
hmm not exactly but quite similar i must admit. i agree also that these laws should also be abolished. many political scientists have observed that france and turkey resemble 2 sides of the same coin.



The french law is almost sentence to sentence similar. German one is a little different. When it comes to the common good of the nation all systems use bans on freedoms.

Eg: Cameras in UK, homeland security in USA etc. The thing is they all have good reasons to do so while others shouldn't icon_smile.gif

They all have nukes but don't want others to have them, don't they ?
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Mordoth
post 11/14/07 04:28 AM
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Same article exists in some EU member countries .It is a double standart of Giaour (infidel) EU to the Turks .
The idea " being a member of EU " is nothing more than a stupidity. I suppose many of our fellows also oppose dependancy upon Brussels.

I dislike Europe and its sub groups.
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Hosank
post 11/16/07 09:25 AM
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QUOTE
: Cameras in UK, homeland security in USA etc. The thing is they all have good reasons to do so while others shouldn't icon_smile.gif

They all have nukes but don't want others to have them, don't they ?

though these have little to do with free speech laws, none the less, i agree that they are a strain on our freedoms.
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Kurd-BOSS
post 11/18/07 06:45 AM
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QUOTE(arrow @ 11/14/07 04:44 AM) [snapback]117418[/snapback]
Eg: Cameras in UK, homeland security in USA etc. The thing is they all have good reasons to do so while others shouldn't icon_smile.gif

They all have nukes but don't want others to have them, don't they ?


Typical anti-Western propaganda.
If it wasn't for the West, the PKK wouldn't have been branded as a terrorist organization and the leader would not have been captured.
Turkey and double standards.
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post 11/18/07 01:46 PM
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QUOTE(Kurd-BOSS @ 11/18/07 02:45 PM) [snapback]117518[/snapback]
Typical anti-Western propaganda.
If it wasn't for the West, the PKK wouldn't have been branded as a terrorist organization and the leader would not have been captured.
Turkey and double standards.



But he is captured and PKK is a terror organisation icon_smile.gif

And what I wrote are not from Turkish sources but UK and US sources. Although I admit US is not as popular as she used to be.
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Mordoth
post 11/27/07 11:23 PM
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QUOTE(Kurd-BOSS @ 11/18/07 08:45 AM) [snapback]117518[/snapback]
Turkey and double standards.

K**ds and stupidity. Sounds IDENTICAL to me.
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