Two journalists seriously injured last week during a violent dispersal of an opposition demonstration in Yerevan yesterday rejected the request by President Serzh Sarkisian to “forget” this violence.
At least 14 journalists and cameramen were injured in clashes between police and demonstrators showing their support for an armed opposition group. Almost all of them were assaulted by men in civilian clothes.
Turkey arrests 17 journalists on ‘terror’ charges
A court in Turkey has put 17 journalists under arrest over links to US-based opposition cleric Fethullah Gulen, who is blamed for the July 15 failed coup attempt.
A court in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city, on Saturday remanded in custody the journalists on charges of being members of a “terror group.”
On Friday, 21 detained journalists appeared before a judge in hearings which lasted until midnight. Four were then freed but 17 were placed under pre-trial arrest.
Those held include veteran journalist Nazli Ilicak as well as former correspondent for the pro-Gulen Zaman daily, Hanim Busra Erdal.
Among the four freed is prominent commentator Bulent Mumay.
“I could never have imagined being accused of such a thing. It was a madness. It’s not right to arrest journalists — this country should not make the same mistakes again,” he said.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu defended the detention of reporters, saying it was necessary to distinguish between coup plotters and those “who are engaged in real journalism.”
Ankara considers Gulen’s movement a terror group, saying it was behind the July 15 coup. He fiercely denies the allegation.
Turkey has detained more than 18,000 people over suspected involvement in the attempted coup, with the relentless crackdown sparking warnings from the European Union that Ankara’s EU membership bid may be in danger.
Turkey must respect ‘rule of law’
On Friday, EU Enlargement and Regional Policy Commissioner Johannes Hahn warned Turkey that the bloc would freeze the country’s accession talks if its post-coup crackdown violates the rule of law.
Turkey: Detention warrants issued for 42 journalists over failed coup attempt
Detention warrants were issued for 42 journalists on July 25 as a part of ongoing investigations against members of the Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETÖ), which the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) says was behind the July 15 failed coup attempt. The detention warrants were issued by the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office’s Terrorism and Organized Crime Bureau.
“The only organization that I’m a member of is [the] Turkish Journalists Association [TGC]. My only profession is journalism,” Bülent Mumay, who was among the journalists whom a warrant was issued for, wrote on his Twitter account, as he added that he would go to the prosecutor’s office to testify.
Another name in the list, Ercan Gün, who is the news director of broadcaster Fox TV, said that he will also testify.
“I trust the law even during the state of emergency,” Gün wrote on his Twitter account.
A total of 14 journalists have been detained so far while 11 were abroad, according to Doğan News Agency. Eight among the journalists abroad left Turkey after July 15 and three of them left before the failed bid, the agency also said.
The gendarmerie, police and coast guard have conducted searches to apprehend Nazlı Ilıcak, a former parliamentarian and journalist who was also on the list.
The police determined at around 5 a.m. on July 25 that Ilıcak was in the Bodrum district of the southern province of Muğla and started carrying out searches in the places she might possibly be.
Security officials couldn’t find Ilıcak at either her house or her yacht.
Meanwhile, a statement was released from the International Press Institute regarding the issue, which “expressed alarm” at the development.
“Given recent developments, we fear that this is only the first wave of arrests targeting journalists in a crackdown that increasingly resembles a witch hunt,” IPI Director of Advocacy and Communications Steven M. Ellis said.
“We urge Turkey’s international partners not to turn a blind eye to the human rights abuses being carried out in the name of upholding democracy. To do so invites a degree of authoritarianism and impunity that will only destabilize the region even further,” the statement also read.
The list of the journalists for whom a detention warrant was issued is as follows:
Abdullah Abdulkadiroğlu, Abdullah Kılıç, Ahmet Dönmez, Ali Akkuş, Arda Akın, Ayşe Nazlı Ilıcak, Bayram Kaya, Bilal Şahin, Bülent Ceyhan, Bülent Mumay, Bünyamin Köseli, Cemal Azmi Kalyoncu, Cevheri Güven, Cihan Acar, Cuma Ulus, Emre Soncan, Ercan Gün, Erkan Akkuş, Ertuğrul Erbaş, Fatih Akalan, Fatih Yağmur, Habip Güler, Hanım Büşra Erdal, Haşim Söylemez, Hüseyin Aydın, İbrahim Balta, Kamil Maman, Kerim Gün, Levent Kenez, Mahmut Hazar, Mehmet Gündem, Metin Yıkar, Muhammed Fatih Uğur, Mustafa Erkan Acar, Mürsel Genç, Selahattin Sevi, Seyid Kılıç, Turan Görüryılmaz, Ufuk Şanlı, Ufuk Emin Köroğlu, Yakup Sağlam and Yakup Çetin.
July/25/2016
Source: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/detention-warrants-issued-for-42-journalists-over-failed-coup-attempt.aspx?pageID=238&nID=102033&NewsCatID=341
Journalists will not be compliant: Arrested RSF Turkey representative
Journalists in Turkey will persist in not being “compliant,” the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders’ (RSF) arrested Turkey representative, Erol Önderoğlu, has vowed in his first message from the prison, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.
“As a journalist who has been monitoring legal practices for a long time, I do not remember a period in which especially academics for peace [and journalists ]have faced such crackdowns,” Önderoğlu said in a message shared on RSF international’s official Twitter account.
“Embracing our values of freedom will give us more strength,” he said, while expressing gratitude for all colleagues, lawyers and conscientious people who did not abandon him and his two arrested colleagues.
Önderoğlu was arrested on June 20 along with journalist Ahmet Nesin and Human Rights Foundation of Turkey (TİHV) head Professor Şebnem Korur Fincancı after supporting a campaign in solidarity with Turkish daily Özgür Gündem, which was started on May 3, World Press Freedom Day.
An Istanbul court charged the three with “making terror propaganda” after they served as editors-in-chief of Özgür Gündem for one day as part of the daily’s “Editor-in-chief on Duty” campaign.
RSF also launched a petition for the release of Önderoglu.
“Handcuffed and jailed after a closed hearing, Erol Önderoglu is today the victim of the persecutions he always denounced. It’s now our turn to fight for him,” RSF announced, calling on authorities for the immediate release of the three campaigners.
Johann Bihr, the head of RSF’s Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk, called the arrest of campaigners another dark day for media freedom in the country.
“Erol Önderoglu has fought tirelessly to defend persecuted journalists for the past 20 years. He is a leader in this field because of his honesty and integrity, which are recognized the world over. It says a lot about the decline in media freedom in Turkey that he is now also being targeted,”Bihr said.
A total of 44 prominent journalists and thinkers – including Hasan Cemal, Şeyhmus Diken, Tuğrul Eryılmaz, Ayşe Düzkan, Can Dündar and İhsan Eliaçık – served as one-day editors-in-chief during the campaign. Some 37 of them have been investigated so far.
Meanwhile, leading rights group including PEN International and the Vienna-based International Press Institute (IPI) called for the “immediate and unconditional release” of Önderoğlu and his two colleagues in a joint statement issued on June 22.
“RSF demands the immediate and unconditional release of its representative and his two colleagues. The organization calls for the withdrawal of all charges against him and other participants of this solidarity campaign,” said the joint oral statement co-sponsored by PEN International, Article 19, International Federation of Journalists, European Federation of Journalists, International Press Institute.
The statement was delivered on behalf of a further 25 NGOs including the Journalists’ Union of Turkey (TGS), the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), Ethical Journalism Network, European Centre for Press and Media Freedom, Index on Censorship, and Global Editors Network.
DİSK Basın-İş, for whom Düzkan acts as an executive board member, also called for the trio’s immediate release, while demanding rapid changes to the country’s anti-terror law and an end to pre-trial imprisonment for cases of defamation against the president.
Questioning the wisdom of the arrests, DİSK Basın-İş said: “Were the accusations so unique? No. Were they flight risks? No. They went of their own volition to testify, with [Önderoğlu] actually cutting short a trip to Germany to return to provide a statement. Was there any risk of tampering with evidence? How do you tamper with a newspaper that’s already been published?”
Over 600 Journalists Applied to Cover Pope Francis’ Visit to Armenia
YEREVAN (Arka)—More than 600 media representatives have applied to be accredited to cover the visit of the Pope to Armenia, Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on its Twitter page.
Pope Francis’ visit to Armenia will commence on June 24 with an official welcoming ceremony at the Zvartnots International Airport in Yerevan before the Pope’s travel to the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, where a welcoming service will be offered in the Mother Cathedral.
In the evening, Pope Francis will meet with President Serzh Sarkisian, then with the authorities, community leaders, and representatives of diplomatic missions accredited in Armenia. The first day will conclude with a meeting at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, with His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians.
On the morning of June 25, His Holiness Pope Francis will visit Tsitsernakaberd, the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex and Museum in Yerevan. Pope Francis, along with His Holiness Karekin II, will visit the city of Gyumri, where a Divine Liturgy will be offered in Vardanants Square. The Pope will also visit Our Lady of Armenia Convent of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Immaculate Conception in Gyumri, then the Seven Wounds Saint Mary Church of the Diocese of Shirak of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church and the Holy Martyrs Armenian Catholic Cathedral. In the evening, an outdoor Ecumenical Service and Peace Prayer will be held in Yerevan – in Republic Square.
On June 26, in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Pope Francis will meet with Armenian Catholic bishops, and then participate in a Divine Liturgy and an Ecumenical dinner, along with His Holiness Karekin II, the Archbishops and Bishops of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church, Armenian Catholic Archbishops and Bishops and the Papal delegation. Pope Francis will also meet delegates and benefactors of the Armenian Church. His Holiness Pope Francis and His Holiness Karekin II will sign a joint declaration.
The Spiritual leaders will offer their prayers at the Khor Virap Monastery, following which Pope Francis will depart for Rome..
Meet Turkish Journalist Who Lost Custody Of Kids Over Critical Reporting
Journalist/Columnist, Today’s Zaman/Al Arabiya
Relentless crackdown on journalists and media outlets in Turkey is not news. But the censorship has taken a whole new level last week when a Turkish court stripped a prominent journalist of legal rights over her two children for publishing a video about the Syria arms delivery.
Arzu Yildiz, an unwavering journalist mostly reporting about court battles and a fierce critic of the government, was also given a 20-month prison sentence for publishing the video on YouTube last year. The video is a two-hour long court defense of a prosecutor who intercepted a truck in southern Turkey full of arms heading toward a Syrian territory held by Ahrar al-Sham, an Islamist extremist group.
From Supporter To Critic
Yildiz, a mother of two, was actually a staunch supporter of the government back when tens of thousands of people thronged streets across Turkey to protest against then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan‘s increasingly authoritarian rule in the summer of 2013. She later joined Turkiye, a government mouthpiece paper.
In Turkiye, she broke a story about two senior female administrators within the ruling AKP suspected of spying for Iran. The story led to an investigation and several arrests. But the authorities later sued the newspaper over the story. Yildiz wrote a number of high-profile stories during her time in Turkiye, but her editors refused to publish most of them for being too critical of the authorities. A growing discord over the newspaper’s editorial line forced her to resign.
Her departure from Turkiye coincided with a corruption scandal involving Erdogan and his inner circle as well as a raucous election campaign viewed as the one of the most heated and divisive political wrangling.
Stepping Into Minefield
In a Wednesday night in January 2014, Yildiz published a bombshell story on T24, a news portal she joined after quitting Turkiye. Initially it was several paragraphs long, but it was enough to cause an uproar in the public. She reported that prosecutors from Adana, a southern Turkish city, intercepted trucks carrying arms into Syria. She knew that she was stepping into a minefield, because publicly debating or questioning this issue was off-limits.
That story sparked such an outrage from the country’s top leadership that Erdogan made it his life’s mission to cover up the scandal. The arms-filled trucks, allegedly administered by the Turkish spy agency, justified rumors that Turkey helped fostered radical groups in Syria and ultimately the ISIS. Erdogan publicly derided prosecutors and law enforcement who participated in an operation to halt the trucks, calling them “traitors” and accusing them of “spying.”
The prosecutors were later locked up. They still languish in jails, without any prospect of being released anytime soon.
Erdogan and then-President Abdullah Gul repeatedly asserted that the trucks were carrying humanitarian aid to Syrian civilians, but the content of the trucks were “state secrets.” The government, however, could not keep its narrative consistent. Senior AKP official Yasin Aktay acknowledged that the trucks were heading to Syrian rebels. I asked Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin during his visit to Washington last year if this was true. He said he had no idea why that official made such a remark and that the trucks were only carrying humanitarian relief.
But Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu brought into the surface another narrative, claiming that it was carrying arms to Turkmen rebels who were besieged by forces loyal to the Syrian regime. Turkmens fired back: We did not receive any weapons.
While the story slowly ebbed away over the time, the Cumhuriyet daily published photos and footage of medical supplies and arms in the Syria-bound trucks. The revelations infuriated Erdogan. He vowed that Can Dundar, the newspaper’s top editor, “will pay a heavy price” over the story. Journalist Dundar was locked up for three months, survived an assassination attempt and sentenced to five years in prison. Erdogan displayed little flexibility in tolerating stories linked to the Syrian arms delivery.
Reporting At a Price
Joining efforts with other journalists who had recently lost their jobs due to the government pressure, Arzu Yildiz co-founded a web-site called grihat, where she continued her critical and exclusive reporting. One of these reporting included the publication of a video of Prosecutor Ozcan Sisman‘s court defense. The video ricocheted across the social media, revealing details of how Turkish public officials aided radical groups in Syria as well as helped terrorists in bombing attacks such as in Reyhanli and Cilvegozu.
He made clear in his defense that he acted out of fear that these arms could end up in the hands of terrorists and that he did not know that the trucks were administrated by the spy agency, whose agents have an immunity to a prosecution.
Obtaining or spreading the footage of the court defense is illegal in Turkey, but the court preferred to punish the journalist who published it, not the one who leaked it. Turkey recently made it a crime to publish any classified document linked to the spy agency, a law that was widely criticized by global rights groups.
As Arzu Yildiz pleaded not guilty in the court, she told the judge that her publication of the video was a pure journalistic activity and that people deserve to know details of such a high-profile case.
At a time when even veteran Turkish journalists are cowed into submission, Yildiz’s brave reporting came with a price. She lost her freedom, but also her children. It is a chilling reminder to other journalists of what they may expect if they go down a similar path. Erdogan did not only threaten Can Dundar, but also other reporters who may choose to report on this sensitive matter.
Azerbaijan releases prominent journalist Khadija Ismayilova
Azerbaijan’s Supreme Court ordered that RFE/RL journalist Khadija Ismayilova be released from custody after reducing her prison term from 7 1/2 years in custody to a suspended term of 3 1/2 years, RFE/RL reports.
The court made the decision on Wednesday, May 25 after hearing an appeal by the journalist.
Ismayilova was detained in December 2014 and sentenced in September 2015 on tax-evasion and embezzlement charges. Western governments and international press-freedom groups long called for her release.
The charges have widely been seen as retaliation for her award-winning investigative reporting linking the family of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to corruption.
Terrorist State of Turkey silenced 900 journos since January: Journalists’ association
The Turkish government has dismissed hundreds of journalists so far this year and blocked tens of thousands of websites since mid-2015, says an association for journalists in Turkey.
According to the report by the Press for Freedom Project (ÖiB), which is affiliated with the Turkish Journalists’ Association (TGC), at least 160 journalists were sacked in April alone, raising the number of dismissed journalists in the Anatolian country to a total of 894 since January.
The report also set the number of blocked websites at 104,904 since the Turkish general election in June 2015.
Moreover, a total of 33 reporters were arrested from January to April, it further said, adding that 12 journalists faced charges over “insulting” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (pictured below).
The report also highlighted the case of Can Dundar, the editor-in-chief of center-left Turkish daily Cumhuriyet, who was given five years and 10 months of jail terms on May 6, while the paper’s Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gul, was given a five-year prison sentence, both over charges “leaking state secrets.”
“Journalists chase news. Treating journalists and newspaper managers, who search for, write and publish news, as ‘terrorists’ or ‘spies’ displays the state of freedoms in the country in question,” the report said.
Freedom is a “must” for the press and the citizens’ involvement in politics is possible only through a free media, said chair of the TGC, Nazmi Bilgin, during a Saturday press conference, in which the findings of the report were announced with emphasis on the importance of press freedom to enable a modern, democratic society.
Turkey has been under fire for clamping down on journalists since Erdogan came to power in 2014, after serving as a premier over a decade.
With dozens of journalists already put behind bars, activists say Erdogan has filed hundreds of other court cases against critics, including many journalists, for insulting him since he became president.
In 2015, nearly 800 Turkish journalists were sacked, 156 others were detained, and court cases were opened against 238 members of the press, according to the Republican People’s Party deputy head, Sezgin Tanrıkulu.
894 Turkish journalists dismissed since January 2016: Report
A total 894 journalists have been dismissed from work since the beginning of 2016, according to a fresh report by Press For Freedom, a project funded by Britain’s Bilateral Program, which produces monthly, quarterly and yearly reports on the state of media freedoms in Turkey, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.
The report, whose findings were announced at a press conference on May 14, displayed a gloomy picture of the deteriorating state of press freedoms in Turkey.
Two newspapers and a news agency have been “silenced” with the appointment of a trustee panel due to “strong evidence” of links to the Gülen movement, followers of U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, an ally-turned-foe of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the report said.
At least 160 journalists were laid off in Turkey in April, increasing the number of discharged journalists to a total 894 over the first quarter of 2016, the report said.
The research also noted some 104,904 websites were blocked while access has been denied to the website of the Dicle News Agency (DİHA) 37 times since the general elections on June 7, 2015. Thirteen of the agency’s journalists are also current under arrest.
Violence targeting members of the press also rose over the same period, as a total 200 attacks were reported against journalists, including 21 against media institutions. A fourth Syrian journalist, Zahir al-Sherqat, was killed in April by suspected militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), prompting the Vienna-based International Press Institute (IPI) to call on the Turkish government to take serious measures against ISIL violence on Turkish soil.
Meanwhile, a total of 33 reporters were detained between January and April 2016, 13 investigations were launched against journalists while 12 journalists were brought before court. Over the same period, 12 journalists faced charges over “insulting the president.”
In the report, Press For Freedom highlighted the situation of daily Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief Can Dündar and Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gül, as an Istanbul court sentenced the journalists to five years in prison for “leaking state secrets” on May 6, hours after Dündar escaped unharmed from an armed attack in front of Istanbul’s Çağlayan courthouse.
“Journalists chase news. Treating journalists and newspaper managers, who search for, write and publish news, as ‘terrorists’ or ‘spies’ displays the state of freedoms in the country in question,” the report said, also criticizing a lack of safety for reporters in Turkey’s southeastern provinces where operations against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) have been continuing for months.
Speaking during the event, Turkish Journalists Association (TGC) chair Nazmi Bilgin stressed the importance of press freedoms to enable a modern, democratic society.
“Freedom is a must for freedom and freedom a must for the press,” he said, adding citizens’ involvement in politics and the operability of the right to information is only possible via a free media.
Meanwhile, Yusuf Kanlı, the coordinator of the project who is also a columnist for the Hürriyet Daily News, said it was not possible to speak of a democracy where opposition voices are being silenced, censorship is common and press freedoms are under pressure.
Turkey has been classified as a “not free” country by U.S.-based think tank Freedom House’s press freedom reports since 2014, when its status deteriorated from “partly free” due to the treatment of journalists during the widespread Gezi Park protests and the backlash against their coverage of corruption probes in 2013.
Autocratic Ottoman All latest updates Erdogan is sending its journalists to prison
After forcing out his prime minister, President Erdogan muzzles the press
CAN DUNDAR saw the shooter approach and take aim at his legs. “He drew his gun, called me a traitor, and began firing,” he says, recalling the scene on May 6th outside an Istanbul courthouse, where he and a colleague have been standing trial. His wife grabbed the gunman, and Mr Dundar (pictured, right), one of Turkey’s best-known journalists, survived unscathed. Just hours later, he was sentenced to nearly six years in jail for publishing details of covert Turkish arms shipments to Syrian insurgents in Cumhuriyet, the newspaper where he served as editor-in-chief. The paper’s Ankara bureau chief, Erdem Gul (pictured, left), was sentenced to five years. Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who had called on the pair to “pay a heavy price” for revealing state secrets, has kept mum about the attack. Pro-government newspapers suggested it had been staged to attract sympathy for its target.
These are dark days for journalism in Turkey. The latest press freedom index by Reporters Without Borders puts the country in 151st place, between Tajikistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Censorship is the industry standard. News reports from the Kurdish southeast, where clashes between armed separatists and Turkish security forces have claimed more than a thousand lives since last summer, increasingly resemble army propaganda. The dead are referred to either as “martyrs” or “terrorists”; civilians, at least 250 of whom have been killed in the fighting, are seldom mentioned.
Journalists are routinely sacked or dragged through the courts. In late April two columnists, also from Cumhuriyet, were given prison terms for republishing a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad. Mr Dundar blames Mr Erdogan and his government. “Most of our media [have] already surrendered,” he says. “Now they are trying to silence the rest.”
The departure of prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu, hounded into resigning last week, and the pending appointment of a more pliant successor, will make that task easier. For over a year, Mr Erdogan has been pushing for constitutional changes that will give him sweeping new powers. He is now ratcheting up his campaign to transform Turkey’s system of government from a parliamentary to presidential one. “At this point,” he said in a speech on May 6th, “there is no turning back.”
To get those changes, he will need an early election, a referendum, or both. But it may no longer matter. With Mr Davutoglu out of the way, one of the last checks on Mr Erdogan’s power is gone. “This effectively marks the end of parliamentary democracy in Turkey,” says one political strategist. “Davutoglu may not have been a huge reformist, but the fact that he was in the system gave people some reassurance that things would not lead in the direction of one-man rule,” says Asli Aydintasbas of the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank. That reassurance is now gone.
A deal that promised visa-free travel to the EU for Turkish citizens, in exchange for a range of reforms and a commitment to stem illegal migration to Europe, offered some hope of emboldening the reformists in the Turkish government. That deal is now hanging on by a thread.
Mr Erdogan seems more than happy to snap it. In his speech, the Turkish leader slammed Europe for asking Turkey to amend its laws against terrorism, which are increasingly used to prosecute Kurdish activists and other critics, including Mr Dundar. “The EU says: you will change the anti-terror law for visas,” he said. “Pardon me, but we are going our way and you can go yours.”
Source: economist.com
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