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Turkey: trampling on free speech continues
Novelist Orhan Pamuk faces jail terms
By Kerem Kaya
8 October 2005
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The prominent Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk will be tried on
December 16 and faces up to four years imprisonment on charges
of public denigration of Turkish identity for publicly
speaking out about the Armenian genocide. It is estimated that
more than one million Armenian were killed between 1915-1918 during
World War I when the Ottoman Empirethe precursor of the
Republic of Turkeywas crumbling.
In an interview with the Swiss daily Tagesanzeiger published
on February 6, Pamuk was quoted as saying, Thirty thousand
Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in Turkey. Almost no
one dares speak but me, and the nationalists hate me for that.
This was the evidence of his crime.
On February 18, after filing charges at the Kayseri state prosecutors
office, Kayseri Bar Association attorney Orhan Pekmezci said,
Pamuk has made groundless claims against the Turkish identity,
the Turkish military and Turkey as a whole. I think he should
be punished for violating Article 159 and 312 of the Turkish Penal
Code.
Despite having made the statements in February, Orhan Pamuk
is expected to be tried under the new Turkish Penal Code Article
301/1 passed only last June. According to this article, a person
who insults ... the Republic can be jailed for between
six months to three years. If the insult was executed
abroad, as Pamuk has done, then Article 301/3 imposes a one-third
increase in the length of sentence.
The new Turkish Penal Code was passed by the parliament after
a two-month delay due to widespread opposition. It includes harsh
jail terms not only for journalists (as in the old code) but also
for all members of the media deemed to have insulted the state
and/or any of its institutions, such as parliament, the army,
etc. It also introduces a new clause that equates any member of
these institutions with the institution itself, should they be
individually insulted. A clear definition of insult is not included
in the lawthe only escape clause being Article 301/4, which
declares that any critical opinion does not constitute
a crime.
The actions taken against Pamuk come amidst a wave of nationalistic
sentiment whipped up by the Turkish establishment (See Turkey:
militarys nationalist campaign conceals rapprochement with
US). The Turkish press was full of attacks on Pamuk
in recent months, which resulted in his receiving death threats.
The killing of Armenians between 1915-1918 is not disputed
by the Turkish state, but the number of the dead and the definition
of genocide are. Successive Turkish governments, Britain and the
United States, have never acknowledged genocide. In the recent
discussions of Turkeys possible entry into the European
Union, France and other countries demanded that Turkey acknowledge
the Armenian genocide as a pre-condition for entry.
The victimization of Pamuk throws light on Turkeys rejection
of even the limited demands of the EU to improve its record on
democratic rights. In fact the opposite is the case. It is the
EU that has made the concessions regarding democratic rights during
the negotiations and allowed the recent penal code to pass without
opposition. Human right abuses in Turkey are hardly news in the
Western media unless they are extremely dramatic, such as the
beating of women at the Womens Day celebrations this year,
or unless they represent a timely bargaining chip in the EU negotiations
for France or other countries that view Turkey as too close to
Washington.
In Britain, a close ally of Washington and therefore a backer
of Turkeys bid for EU membership, the press has reacted
nervously to the charges against Pamuk. The Sunday Times
wrote that Pamuks case has been an embarrassment for
the Turkish government. The Independent was concerned
that Turkey is giving excuses to her enemies.
The last thing on the minds of Europes ruling elites
is Pamuks right to free speech.
Pamuk is a household name in Turkey and he has gained prominence
in international literature over the last decade and a half, with
his novels translated into 20 languages. When he won the Independent
Award for Foreign Fiction in 1990 the New York Times confidently
noted, A new star has risen in the east. He went on
to win international literatures most lucrative prize, the
IMPAC Dublin Award, for his novel, Benim Adim Kirmizi (My
Name Is Red), published in 2000.
Pamuk has consistently opposed right-wing forces in Turkey.
He once wrote in an academy journal, Turks gripped by romantic
myths of nationalism are keen to establish that we come from Mongolia
or central Asia.... scholars have come no closer to offering definitive
or convincing evidence to link us with a particular time and place.
Against this right-wing theory of Turkish identity reaching back
thousands of years, Pamuk, in his novel Kar (Snow), chose
the venue of Karsa formerly Armenian cityand made
sympathetic references to Armenian culture.
In 1999, he refused to accept the highest cultural accolade
awarded by the Turkish governmentthe title of state artist.
He said, For years I have been criticizing the state for
putting authors in jail, for only trying to solve the Kurdish
problem by force, and for its narrow-minded nationalism, I dont
know why they tried to give me the prize.
Turkey has never been a safe country for artists. Virtually
every prominent writer who has something to say about the repression
in the country has been targeted for persecution by the state.
Nazim Hikmet, arguably the best poet the country has ever produced,
was charged in 1925 as a secret (Communist) party member and sentenced
to 15 years hard labor. His works were banned between 1938 and
1965, until two years after his death in exile in Moscow.
In 1939, Orhan Kemal, one of the most prominent Turkish writers
of the last century, was sentenced to a five-year jail term for
his political views. Having stayed in the same jail as Nazim Hikmet,
Kemal was intensely influenced by him.
On 1 July 1993, the humorist Aziz Nesin barely escaped with
his life from Madimak Hotel where he was staying with other artists
attending the traditional Pir Sultan Abdal festival in Sivas.
The hotel was set on fire by fundamentalist mobs, killing 36 artists
and injuring 24. A 6,000-strong military brigade situated near
the hotel did nothing for eight hours, until the mobs achieved
their mission. A group of artists was finally rescued by the fire
brigade, but when they realized that Aziz Nesin was amongst them
the firemen and the police joined the mob attackinflicting
injuries to his head and body. Eventually the military moved in
to stop the lynching. Nesins crime was to speak out publicly
and consistently on behalf of secularism. He too was jailed several
times as a result of his socialist views.
More recently, a local administrator in the city of Isparta,
Mustafa Altinpinar, sent a circular to all libraries in the region
demanding that Pamuks books be seized and burned. The government
was negotiating at the time with the EU over membership. It was
spared further embarrassment because none of the libraries in
the region actually stocked Pamuks books.
Apart from these high-profile cases, literally thousands of
journalists and writers have been prosecuted and jailed over the
years. Only recently, a few days after the new laws were passed,
journalist-writer Emin Karaca was charged with condemning
the execution of the three leaders of revolutionary youthreferring
to the executions of Deniz Gezmis, Yusuf Aslan and Hüseyin
Inan, 30 years ago. PEN American Center, an organization that
defends free expression, reported that, according to their records,
there are today over 50 journalists, writers and publishers before
the courts in Turkey.
See Also:
Turkey: poverty increases
with economic expansion
[11 June 2005]
Turkey: IMF plan demands new
attacks on working people
[30 May 2005]
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