|
The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Miklos Haraszti,
welcomed the acquittal of Fikret Baskaya in Ankara today and said
he will monitor the postponed trial of Ragip Zarakolu.
Fikret Baskaya, a writer and academic, was charged under Article
302 of the Penal Code with "insulting the military and security
forces of the State." If convicted, he could have faced up
to three years in prison.
Publisher Ragip Zarakolu's trial was postponed to 12 May 2005 on
procedural grounds. Ragip Zarakolu is charged under Article 216
of the Code for publishing a book about government policies on Kurdish
issues which prosecutors say instigated hatred. If convicted, he
could receive a prison sentence of up to two years.
In a letter to Justice Minister Cemil Cicek, Haraszti welcomed
a reform of the Penal Code which will enter into force on 1 April,
but added:
"There are still some worrying provisions in your Penal Code
which run against OSCE commitments on freedom of expression. This
is of serious concern to my Office which has been campaigning in
the OSCE region against criminal defamation laws and provisions
that offer elevated protection to government and to officials."
The Representative asked the Turkish Government to remove Articles
216 and 302 from the Penal Code. "Article 216 contradicts the
internationally recognized basic principle that speech cannot be
prosecuted when there is no incitement to violence," he said.
Haraszti also urged the Turkish authorities to eliminate in a legally
binding way all references in official documents suggesting that
calls for the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus or claims
that Armenians were exposed to genocide could be treated as crimes.
This is referred to in an explanatory document which accompanies
Article 305 of the Penal Code, "Offences against national interests."
Previously these two examples were omitted from a version of the
Penal Code which was sent to judges.
"Removing these examples officially can help exclude the impression
that Article 305 allows the punishment of speech," Haraszti
said.
|