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Two Journalist out of Jail Another Turkish columnist faces four years in jail for ‘insulting Erdoğan’

February 26, 2016 By administrator

n_95771_1Prominent columnist Cengiz Çandar faces four years in jail for “insulting” President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in seven opinion pieces published on the Radikal news website.

The indictment prepared by Bakırköy Public Prosecutor Ertuğrul Sarıyar is based on a complaint filed by Erdoğan’s lawyer Ahmet Özel regarding seven of Çandar’s pieces published between July 26 and Aug. 19.
Çandar will be tried for violating Article 299 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK). If found guilty he faces between one to four years in prison.

The trial will begin on April 7.

Speaking to news website T24, Çandar said he received the written notice on Feb. 26, which he noted coincided with both President Erdoğan’s birthday and “Can Dündar and Erdem Gül’s release from prison.”

Imprisoned daily Cumhuriyet journalists Dündar and Gül were released from pre-trial detention after 92 days of imprisonment, after Turkey’s Constitutional Court ruled that their rights had been violated.

February/26/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Cengiz Candar, faces, jail, Journalist, Turkish

Terrorist State of Turkey Police violence against journalists

February 19, 2016 By administrator

arton122367-480x305The trick President Erdogan does not want the world to see these images. As clashes between the PKK (the Kurdistan Workers’ Party) and the Turkish army intensified in Diyarbakir and several Kurdish towns in south-eastern Turkey, media are harassed on the ground by the authorities. A report Spicee.com our partner, the new Media 100% video.

“When I say do not film, do not you Films’! The reporter holds in his hand a camera. Turkish policeman him, holding a gun, he relies on the temple of the journalist, while grabbing her neck with his other hand. Welcome to the war of images, in the conflict between the PKK and Turkey.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Journalist, police, Turkey, Violence

Another Turkish journalist end in Jail for insulting Erdogan

February 2, 2016 By administrator

cmh.thumbAn Istanbul prosecutor has demanded that daily Cumhuriyet columnist Özgür Mumcu be sentenced to four years and eight months in jail for “insulting” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Mumcu is being tried over an op-ed published on May 18, 2015 titled “Tyrant and a coward,” in which he blasted Erdoğan’s criticism of Hatice Cömert, the mother of Gezi protest victim Abdullah Cömert.

“It is well-known that tyrants are always fearful. They are so fearful that they would even file a complaint against someone like Abdullah Cömert’s mother,” the piece read.

During the first hearing of the case on Feb. 2 at Istanbul’s Çağlayan Courthouse, Mumcu denied that the article included any kind of insult.

“The piece is a critical text referring to [President Erdoğan] complaint against the mother of Abdullah Cömert after her statements following his death. This article was written following Erdoğan’s complaint, which had been widely reported in the media,” Mumcu said at the trial.

“As a columnist, I used my right to criticize. I’m a lawyer and professor myself. The testimonies and annexes that we have presented to court include samples of European Court of Human Rights [ECHR] rulings and also domestic laws. Therefore, I do not accept the accusations,” he added.

Hatice Özay, the lawyer of Erdoğan, defended the president’s case, saying Mumcu described him in the column as “a tyrant who oppresses his people, treating them without mercy.”

“We think this wording exceeds the limits of criticism. For these reasons, we demand a punishment for the defendant,” she said.

The court decided to postpone the proceedings, offering time to the lawyers of each side to present evidence and assertions.

In his defense, Mumcu also cited the case of Metin Lokumcu, who died of a heart attack in the Black Sea town of Hopa in 2011 during a police intervention against a protest.

He also referred to the case of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old boy who died after 269 days in coma having been shot in the head by a police tear gas canister during the Gezi Park protests. Mumcu described Erdoğan’s stated attitude on these incidents as “cold-hearted.”

Erdoğan was widely accused of encouraging his supporters to boo Elvan’s family at a public rally in 2014.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, insulting, jail, Journalist, Turkish

Well-known Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov sentenced to 6 years in prison

December 28, 2015 By administrator

Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov

Azerbaijani journalist Rauf Mirkadirov

Baku Court of Grave Crimes sentenced Rauf Mirkadyrov, a well-known Azerbaijani journalist and contributor of the newspaper Zerkalo (Mirror), to 6 years in a colony of strict regime, Azerbaijani news agency Trend reports.

According to the report, the public prosecutor earlier demanded 7 years’ imprisonment for Mirkadirov. However, during the last hearing, the prosecutor asked the court to hand down a milder punishment to the journalist in accordance with the Article 62 of the Criminal Code of Azerbaijan, which offers a milder punishment for that concrete crime. The investigation was conducted by the Ministry of National Security.

Minval.az reports that Mirkadirov was charged under the Article 274 (high treason) of the Criminal Code. He is accused of taking part in the joint projects of the Institute for Peace of Democracy with the civil society groups of Armenia, and providing information supposed to be state secret during those events. The journalist denies the charge. Rights defenders consider him a political prisoner.

According to the website, the journalist’s deportation from Turkey to Azerbaijan, where he was immediately arrested on charges of espionage, drove the observers to maintain that Ankara and Baku might have been agreed on silencing their political opponents. When the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, visited Baku in March, the Turkish media reported about a dossier allegedly handed to the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev which included the names of the Turkish citizens residing in Azerbaijan, who were to be arrested. Those reports were about the supporters of the Turkish preacher Fethullah Gulen, who lives in the US. The Turkish authorities struggle against him both inside their country and abroad.

Rauf Mirkadyrov worked as a correspondent of the newspaper Zerkalo in Turkey. The Turkish authorities unexpectedly said he was deprived of the permission to work and had to leave the country immediately. According to the journalist, his pen fell ‘victim to a deal between Turkey and Azerbaijan.’

Minval.az further notes that Mirkadirov is not the only Azerbaijani journalist to be deported from Turkey. Mahir Zeynalov, well-known contributor for the Today’s Zaman daily, which is connected to Fethullah Gullen, was deported to Azerbaijan for unknown reasons in February.

Turan agency reports that the international community regards Mirkadirov as a prisoner of conscience as the real reason for his arrest was the authorities’ intention to convince the public of the spying and wrecking activities of Leyla Yunus, the rights defender, in whose projects Mirkadirov took part. According to the accusation, it were Leyla Yunus and her husband Arif who ‘recruited’ Rauf Mirkadirov as an Armenian spy. The charge of state treason against the couple was sent to separate proceedings, and they were sentenced on economic accusations. Consequently, their punishment was changed to conditional.

According to Report agency, Ilham Aliyev signed a decree on pardoning a number of sentenced individuals. Azay Guliyev, an MP from the commission on pardoning, said the decree was signed taking into account the appeals for pardoning addressed to the president by a number of sentenced people and their family members, authorised human rights representatives and organisations, as well as the individuals themselves, their health, family situation, their behaviour while serving the prison term, basing on the principles of humanism, in accordance with the 22nd item of the Article 109 of the Constitution of the Azerbaijani Republic. The pardoning list includes 210 people.
Meanwhile, Haqqin.az writes that the list of the convicts, pardoned by the presidential decree, included none of the political prisoners, on whose release the US Department of State, Council of Europe and other international groups insist.

On 23 December, a working group for compiling a comprehensive list of political prisoners issued a consecutive list of the Azerbaijani citizens regarded as political prisoners in the country. The list had 93 names, including well-known rights defenders, journalists, bloggers, political activists, religious leaders and others.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijani, jail, Journalist, Rauf Mirkadirov

Turkey detains & deports Russian journalists investigating ISIS oil trade reports

December 8, 2015 By administrator

 Kobani had entered Syria from Turkey. REUTERS/Rodi Said -

Kobani had entered Syria from Turkey. REUTERS/Rodi Said –

Russian journalists preparing an investigative report into Ankara’s alleged involvement in the oil trade with ISIS have been detained and deported from Turkey. Moscow strongly condemned the treatment of the Rossiya 1 TV crew, demanding explanations.

We strongly condemn the illegal actions of the Turkish authorities,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said. “Such an attitude towards the media is absolutely unacceptable.”

On Monday, the press crew of the TV program ‘Special Correspondent’, headed by Alexander Buzaladze, were detained in southeastern Turkey by authorities in civilian clothes. The journalists were preparing an investigative report into the alleged smuggling of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) oil into Turkey.

READ MORE: ISIS smuggles majority of oil through Turkey, says Iraqi PM

The trouble for the Rossiya 1 TV crew started only once they arrived at the border, Buzaladze said after the deportation. He told Russian state-owned channel Vesti that while the crew worked in Istanbul and Ankara they had faced no opposition from the authorities.

But as soon as they and tried to film close to the Turkish-Syrian border the crew was “blocked [by] the Turkish security forces” leaving them no time to even “get the camera out.”

The Russian crew was arrested in Hatay province bordering Syria as they were on their way to the neighboring province of Gaziantep. According to Buzaladze, there the journalists wanted to film “the border itself, military hardware, people that work at the border, and the border crossing.”

Turkish authorities were first of all concerned “whether we had a camera,” Buzaladze says.

“The first thing they wanted to know [was] if we had a camera. The camera was left in the luggage compartment, locked in a case. Despite this, they took our documents, we were taken to the police station, later we photographed, fingerprinted, brought to the doctor for a medical examination to confirm that we are in a sane state, and that we are alive and well,” the journalist said.

The crew was later informed by the Turkish side that they were being deported. At the same time, authorities failed to explain the reason behind their move, Buzaladedze notes. The Russian journalists were escorted by police to the airport and put on a plane back to Russia.

Throughout the entire incident the Turkish authorities refused to cooperate with Russian diplomats on the ground. The Russian Foreign Ministry wants to know the real reasons behind the detention of the Rossiya 1 crew, and remains curious as to what “rules” were violated by the Russian journalists.

“The Turkish authorities refused to give explanations to representatives of the Russian Embassy in Turkey who got in touch with the crew shortly after its detention,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said. The group was deported apparently under the pretext of its members having violated laws for foreign journalists working in Turkey.

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deport, detain, Journalist, oil, Russian, Turkey

Turkey: ‘Only I and my paper were prosecuted’ – journalist who exposed Turkey’s hospitality for jihadists

December 4, 2015 By administrator

Turkey TerroristThere were numerous reports of Islamist fighters injured in Syria finding shelter and treatment in Turkish hospitals. Dogu Eroglu, a journalist who broke one such story, told RT it resulted in only him and his newspaper being prosecuted.

Eroglu is an investigative journalist working for the opposition BirGun (One Day) newspaper. In September last year he wrote an expose on a medical facility in Gaziantep, a town in southeastern Turkey about an hour’s drive from the Syrian border. The hospital treated fighters who had been injured in the neighboring country with the tacit approval of the Turkish authorities.

“I was told by the hospital administration that they are jihadist fighters and do not have any other profession,” he told RT, adding that after recovering the fighters went back to Syria to fight more battles.

“They also said that the food and sanitation services are provided by the city of Gaziantep, and without the government help it wouldn’t be possible to bring all these injured fighters from Syria to Turkey,” he said.

The Turkish journalist found evidence that fighters from the Islamic Front group were treated at the clinic. The Sunni umbrella group adheres to radical Islamist ideology and is seeking to turn Syria into a state ruled by Sharia law, not a secular constitution. The goal is shared by the notorious Islamic State group, but the two are hostile toward each other, competing for territory, resources and recruits. Some of the militant groups comprising Islamic Front are reported to ally themselves with Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda, which also clashed occasionally with ISIS.

After the expose was published, the facility relocated and various parties involved gave conflicting denials, Eroglu told RT.

“The immediate response from the authorities to our report was to close [the facility] down and transferring patients to other locations. The city of Gaziantep immediately denied our report and told the press that this facility doesn’t exist. The medical organization responsible for running the hospital then confessed that there was such a hospital, but it didn’t serve to cure the jihadists.” he said.

What the Turkish authorities didn’t do is try to prosecute anyone involved in assisting jihadists. Instead, BirGun was accused of false reporting and a Turkish court ordered that the newspaper retract the report.

“I and my newspaper were the only ones who faced prosecution,” Eroglu said. “Under the court decision, we were ordered to put the city’s denial under the story, which made it look like the whole story was false,” Eroglu said.

Eroglu’s story is far from the only example of extremist fighters from various groups reported as being sheltered in Turkey. An Islamic State commander, Emrah Cakan, was confirmed to have received medical attention in a hospital in Denizli. The news triggered a nationwide scandal as opposition MPs demanded that the government explained how a known terrorist leader could get a hospital bed in Turkey.

Hospitals treating militants were identified all across Turkey’s border Hatay Province, Mehmet Ali Ediboglu, who represents the area in the Turkish parliament, told RT.

“There are more than 50 state, university and private hospitals in border cities and jihadists have been treated in these hospitals for five years,” he said. “Wounded Nusra Front and Islamic Front militants are brought there.”

“They are fighters, not civilians. Two or three months ago two militants were brought to Hatay hospitals and there were bombs on them,” Ediboglu said, adding that ambulances taking fighters to hospitals are often escorted by armed jihadists.

Apparently, not all fighters injured in Syria are equal in Turkey. Members of the Kurdish YPG militia injured during the fight for the city of Kobani, when ISIS besieged it last year, told RT they had to be smuggled into Turkey for treatment, because traveling openly there could lead to their arrest.

Turkey, a NATO member, is part of a US-led coalition that is pledged to destroying Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. In practice, however, Turkish warplanes have been targeting Kurdish forces, including those fighting against ISIS, rather than the Islamists.

Russia believes that elements of the Turkish government, including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, are profiting from the plundering of Syria and Iraq by terrorist groups and provide material support to them.

Two prominent journalists were arrested in Turkey last week on espionage allegations after exposing an alleged Turkish special service operation to smuggle arms to Syrian militants.

Source: RT

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Journalist, Turkey

UPDATE: Terrorist State of Turkey’s Crime against humanity (Journalist)

December 1, 2015 By administrator

234582_mainleftErdogan Court rejects appeal to release Cumhuriyet editors Dündar, Gül

An İstanbul court on Tuesday rejected an appeal against the arrest of Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief Can Dündar and Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gül, who were arrested on Nov. 26 as part of an investigation into the paper’s coverage of a National Intelligence Organization (MİT) truck scandal.

**************

Atilla Taş sentenced to 11 months for ‘insulting’ İnegöl mayor on Twitter

  (FOTO: IZMIR DHA)

(FOTO: IZMIR DHA)

Meydan daily columnist Atilla Taş was given on Tuesday a suspended prison sentence of 11 months and 20 days on Tuesday for “insulting” İnegöl Mayor Alinur Aktaş in Twitter posts.

Taş, whose hugely popular Twitter account has more than 1.3 million followers, has criticized the mayor over allegedly fatally poisoning 84 stray dogs in the İnegöl district of Bursa province in his tweets.

Aktaş is now planning to bring a second case against Taş to force him to pay for the court expenses, private Cihan news agency reported.

************

Kenan ErerPresenter at Belgium-based radio station dismissed over criticism of Turkish gov’t

A radio presenter at a Brussels-based Turkish radio station was fired for hosting a radio program that featured criticism of the Turkish government and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Kenan Erer presented the radio program “Karganın Kahvaltısı” [A Crow’s Breakfast] for the last time on Tuesday morning and said the managers of Gold FM radio station had decided to take his program off the air.

“Those who think that they silenced us with oppression and despotism seem to have achieved their goals, but I will continue to take a stand by singing songs and writing books,” said Erer in the program.

He said he received messages of support from the followers of his radio show after his dismissal. “Armenians, Kurds, Turks and people from all sects of this country [Turkey] called me to express sorrow [at my dismissal],” said Erer.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Crime, Journalist, Turkey

Turkey: Armenian journalist jailed in Turkey to get furlough to celebrate 60th birthday

December 1, 2015 By administrator

Nishan-in JailAuthorities of the Turkish prison, where well-known Istanbul Armenian writer, linguist, journalist and columnist Sevan Nișanyan is incarcerated, have decided to grant him furlough on the occasion of his birth anniversary.

Nișanyan himself informed about the aforementioned via social networking websites inviting all his friends to an Istanbul restaurant on December 21, to celebrate his 60th birthday.

He noted that the furlough will be granted as of December 16.

In December 2013, the Armenian intellectual was sentenced to prison on charges of illegal construction, and he is already serving time.

And in December 2014, a Turkish administrative court had ruled that Nișanyan had violated the law on the preservation of cultural and natural resources. As a result, the court had sentenced him to five years, two months and fifteen days in prison plus a 12,600-lira (approx. $5,637, at the time) fine.

With this new sentence, Sevan Nișanyan’s total prison term had amounted to eleven years and eight months.

Sevan Nișanyan has constantly raised the Armenian Genocide issue in Turkey, and stood out by his fearless demeanor in the country.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, furlough, Journalist, Turkey

Terrorist State of Turkey police pepper spray supporters of 2 prominent journalists arrested for ‘treason’ chanted “Murderer Erdogan,

November 27, 2015 By administrator

Turkish journoPolice in Ankara used pepper spray against supporters of two prominent journalists accused of treason over publishing photos of weapons allegedly brought to Syria by Turkish intelligence. Several thousand rallied in their support in Istanbul and Ankara.

The Friday rally in support of the editor-in- chief and Ankara editor of the Cumhuriyet newspaper in the Turkish capital was attended by about 1,000 people accusing the government of attempting to cover up the weapons scandal by silencing the critics and the press. “Shoulder-to-shoulder against fascism,” the crowd chanted.

About 2,000 people gathered near the Cumhuriyet office in Istanbul to demonstrate their solidarity with the arrested journalists. The protesters filled the yard and the street outside the newspaper’s office chanting, “Free press cannot be silenced.”

“It was just like a bomb exploding in Ankara… and [many] organizations around the country called just one day off,” one of the protesters told RT commenting on the arrests. “Society is ready to explode at any moment,” he added.

Some demonstrators also chanted “Murderer Erdogan,” accusing the Turkish president as well as the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of cooperating with Islamic State terrorist group. Some people also held Friday’s edition of Cumhuriyet newspaper with a front-page headline reading “Black Day for the press,” Reuters reported.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: arrest. protest, Journalist, Turkey

The daily Cumhuriyet distinguished for its coverage of the Kurdish question and the Armenian Genocide

November 19, 2015 By administrator

arton118823-480x320Syrian journalist Erhaim Zaina, 30, who worked for the city of Aleppo, ravaged by more than four years of war, is the winner of the 2015 Reporters Without Borders (RSF), presented Tuesday evening in Strasbourg.

The young woman, whose country is considered the most dangerous in the world for journalists, was chosen for its “ethics, determination and courage” and ability to “emphasize the human dimension behind the scenes of war “, said the organizers.

His award was presented to her uncle, at a ceremony held on the sidelines of the “World Forum of Democracy”, attended by the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland.

For two years, Zaina Erhaim has trained a hundred people, a third of women in television journalism and print media, contributing to the emergence of new newspapers and magazines in Syria.

The organization of press freedom also awarded the prize of “Media of the Year” in Turkish daily Cumhuriyet of opposition, which “pays the price for his courageous and independent journalism” in a country where ” a growing crackdown on critical voices. “

In May, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had filed a complaint against Cumhuriyet, which published photos of interception, in January 2014, a convoy loaded with weapons to Syria belonging to the intelligence services (MIT). Its editor, Can Dündar, came Tuesday in Strasbourg to get her award, faces a heavy prison sentence.

RSF also notes that the opposition daily -which stood out for its coverage of the Kurdish question and the Armenian Genocide undergoes “cascade process”, the “repeated blockages of its Internet site” and “slander campaigns “.

It was also the only daily in the Muslim world to be reproduced in its print edition number two reduced versions published by Charlie Hebdo after the attack in January in Paris – with a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad – which earned him prosecuted court.

RSF awarded its prize for “citizen journalist of the year” in a group of Ethiopian bloggers Zone9 who “regularly denounce the draconian regime” in power in Addis Ababa.

Six of these bloggers have recently increased from 15 to 18 months in prison on charges of planning terrorist attacks. Victims of “constant harassment from the authorities,” then arrested in April 2014, they were released in July and October.

None could be present in Strasbourg on Tuesday to seek its price.

- See more at: http://lematin.ma/express/2015/une-jeune-syrienne-designee—journaliste-de-l-annee-/235722.html#sthash.dWOV9iXJ.dpuf

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Cumhuriyet, Journalist, Kurd, Turkey

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