Turkey

8 June 2009

Woman journalist held in Turkey for five weeks on baseless charge of link to armed group

Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has condemned condemns the detention of journalist Aylin Duruoglu, the editor of the daily Vatan’s website, Gazetevatan.com, for the past five weeks on a charge of collaborating with an outlawed armed organisation. Arrested on April 27, she is now being held in Istanbul’s Bakirköy prison. “Duruoglu is the victim of inexplicable judicial persecution,” RSF said. “If...

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9 March 2009

Two Turkey journalists arrested in connection with case about overthrowing government

The Ankara bureau chief of Cumhuriyet Daily, Mustafa Balbay, and online Toplumsal Haber columnist, Nerima Aydin, were taken under custody for a second time in relation to the Ergenekon case, involving accusations of overthrowing the government. Both were sent to Metris prison, IPS Communication Foundation (BIANET) has reported. Turkey's Society of Journalists (TGC), Contemporary Journalists'...

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28 February 2009

Radio Dunya acquitted after facing charges for broadcasting Kurdish folk song

A case brought against Radio Dunya for playing the Kurdish folk song "Mihemedo" in 2007 has ended in acquittal, IPS Communication Foundation (BIANET) has reported quoting broadcasting editor Mehmet Arslan. However, another case against the station is still in court. Radio Dunya broadcasts in the province of Adana, in southern Turkey. On February 23, the radio station's lawyer, Tugay Bek, learnt...

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19 February 2009

Journalists in Turkey face up to three years in prison for "acquiring classified information"

Two journalists, the daily Milliyet's Gokcer Tahincioglu and Vatan newspaper's Kemal Goktas, are on trial in Turkey over allegations related to articles revealing the unlawful authorization of security forces, police, the gendarmerie and the national intelligence service to monitor all electronic communication between citizens. Tahincioglu and Goktas are accused of "acquiring classified...

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13 February 2009
Turkish interior ministry reopens investigation into 2007 murder of journalist Hrant Dink

Turkish interior ministry reopens investigation into 2007 murder of journalist Hrant Dink

The Turkish interior minister has announced a new investigation into the role of the security forces in the 2007 murder of journalist of Armenian origin, Hrant Dink, according to delayed reports. Interior minister, Basir Atalay on February 4, following the publication of a report by the prime minister’s services (BTK), ordered the opening of an investigation into the responsibilities and...

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9 February 2009

Crowd attacks journalists taking photos at government rally after Turkey PM assails media

The International Press Institute (IPI) and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) have reiterated earlier calls for Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to refrain from verbal attacks on the media. This latest call follows the January 30 assault on journalists during a public speech in which the prime minister condemned the press for being biased in their coverage of the recent...

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8 December 2008

Turkish journalist acquitted of charges of "securing and spreading secret documents"

Nazif Iflasoglu, a reporter from the daily Radikal, has been acquitted of the accusation of "securing and spreading secret documents". He had faced the charges for publishing an article about the strategy of the Follow-Up Committee at the Prime Ministry regarding its fight against the radical Muslim Hizbullah Organization, the Istanbul-based IPS Communication Foundation (BIANET) has reported. The...

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5 December 2008

Turkey: Thirteen-year jail term requested for editor who accused prosecutor of bias

A 13-year prison sentence has been imposed by a prosecutor on Haci Bogatekin, owner and editor of Turkish fortnightly Gerger Firat for an article accusing another local prosecutor of bias. A four-and-a-half-year sentence was also requested for the editor of a website that posted the article, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. Bogatekin’s December 2 court appearance was the seventh time...

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14 November 2008

Journalists in Turkey expected to remain silent on subject of torture

The trial of Baris Pehlivan, producer of the programme “I am a witness” on the 24-hour TV news channel CNN Türk, and Nurettin Yilmaz, a former Kurdish politician and parliamentarian and author of “Witness of the recent past,” will begin in the Istanbul district of Bakirkoy on November 18. Charged with “inciting hatred and hostility” under articles 216 and 218 of the criminal code, they could get...

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22 September 2008

Turkish journalist sentenced to ten months in prison under anti-terror law

Turkish journalist Cengiz Kapmaz, editor of pro-Kurdish daily Alternatif, has been sentenced under the Anti-Terror Law to ten months in jail for “making propaganda” for the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) in an article published in June 2006, Paris-based Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported. The Court of Assizes in Istanbul also sentenced the paper’s publisher Hasan Bayar and its owner, Ali...

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