Sat, Feb 11 2012

Another newspaper closed in Turkey

Fri, Dec 18 2009 09:58 CET 1561 Views
An Istanbul criminal court has again ordered the temporary closure of a Turkish newspaper, after accusing it of publishing propaganda for a terrorist organisation, IPI Turkey reported. The December 9 2009 decision to prohibit publication of the weekly Aydinlik for one month constitutes at least the third newspaper ban this year in Turkey.

In June, and again in August, Istanbul’s criminal courts suspended the operations of Günlük newspaper for a period of one month on similar charges.

The latest decision, issued by Istanbul’s 14th Criminal Court, states that several recent articles in Aydinlik, an official newspaper of Turkey’s "Workers’ Party" (‘Isçi Partisi’), "praised a terrorist organisation," while "making state officers the target of a terrorist organisation".

There is no indication that related charges will be brought against the newspaper or any of its employees.

Aydinlik’s management, who first heard about the court order on the day of its issue, deny praising terrorism, and were not immediately aware which articles the court order referred to.

In a press release issued shortly after they received the court decision, Aydinlik claimed authorities have targeted it following its recent publication of a series of articles detailing wiretapped conversations between Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Northern Cyprus’s president, Mehmet Ali Talat.

Police had even arrested Aydinlik’s editor-in-chief, Deniz Yildirim, on October 19, seizing his computer and stating that individuals linked to the so-called "Ergenekon" plot to overthrow the government were behind the wiretaps.

Yildirim was released soon after.

In a statement issued in response to the closure of Aydinlik, IPI Turkey called for the repeal of the laws that allow prosecutors to shut newspapers in this fashion, stating that: "in a democratic country, it is not possible to apply penalties without the occurrence of a crime. This is possible only in totalitarian regimes".


International Press Institute/South East Europe Media Organisation

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