Ozgur Ulke Closed Down! -- Urge
root at newsdesk.aps.nl
root at newsdesk.aps.nl
Sun Feb 5 22:47:12 GMT 1995
From: tabe at newsdesk.aps.nl (Tabe Kooistra)
Subject: Re: Ozgur Ulke Closed Down! -- Urgent Distribution Please
Reply-To: root at newsdesk.aps.nl
Feb.4, 1995 aoturkey at gn.apc.org
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OZGUR ULKE CLOSED DOWN!
Turkey delivers new blow to freedom of expression
Journalists fear extra-judicial killings may begin
Action-On-Turkey/London
Turkey's leading pro-Kurdish daily Ozgur Ulke (Free Country) was
closed down on Friday and banned from further publication. The
closure followed months of official persecution directed at the
paper in the form of bombings, assassinations, confiscation and
kidnapping of reporters and editorial personnel. Journalists
working for the newspaper now fear they may be marked for further
extra-judicial killings and call upon colleagues and
international organizations to take URGENT ACTION in support of
their guaranteed right to life and to collect, express and impart
information.
Friday's verdict for closure was passed by an Istanbul Justice
Court in line with a decision of the National Security Council
Coordination Board taken on Jan.5, 1995, to "eliminate" all
dissident voices in Turkey "within the boundaries of law."
"By closing down Ozgur Ulke, the state has delivered a serious
blow to the freedom of expression in Turkey and silenced the only
remaining opposition voice," Baki Karadeniz, the newspaper's
editor-in-chief, said Saturday. The newspaper has been in print
for nine months and was openly marked as a target "to be
eliminated" by Prime Minister Tansu Ciller in a secret decree she
sent to relevant government offices on Nov.30, 1994. Immediately
after the decree, on Dec.3, 1994, Ozgur Ulke's four-floor
printing facility in Istanbul, its editorial headquarters in the
same city, and its main bureau in Ankara were blasted to pieces
in a serial bombing campaign. Following this attack, police
launched raids on Ozgur Ulke offices in different parts of the
country and as of January 6, all issues of the newspaper were
seized by police and censored. At least five reporters were
tortured by the police in the same period. In the words of
Karadeniz, "such ruthless censorship and persecution was not even
witnessed after 1980, following the military coup."
It is now the basic duty of journalists and writers throughout
the world and international organizations working on human
rights, press freedoms and the freedom of expression to:
-Protest immediately the closure of Ozgur Ulke in violation of
international laws and agreements
-Express concern for the safety of its employees and monitor
developments related to them
-Support any new initiative in Turkey and/or abroad to resurrect
Ozgur Ulke in any form
SEND YOUR PROTEST/CONCERN MESSAGES TO RELATED TURKISH AUTHORITIES,
TURKISH PRESS ORGANIZATIONS AND TURKISH NEWSPAPERS NOW!
Background:
Friday's closure verdict was passed after the 1st Justice Court
in Istanbul on Thursday issued a verdict effectively banning the
newspaper and ordering for the confiscation of all of its copies.
Newspaper attorneys said they had appealed against this sentence
to a higher court on Friday but before any legal action could be
taken, the 2nd Justice Court of the same city passed the closure
decision.
Unlike previous routine orders for seizure issued by the city's
prosecutors office, both verdicts were signed by judges of the
Justice Courts, which are practically the lowest level judicial
authority in such cases. They claimed that "according to evidence
compiled against Ozgur Ulke," it was determined that this
newspaper was a continuation of the Ozgur Gundem (Free Agenda)
which was closed down by a State Security Court last year.
Citing that 24 separate orders for closure had been passed
against Ozgur Gundem, the verdicts signed by two judges said
Ozgur Ulke operated out of the same facilities of the defunct
newspaper, that its telephone and fax numbers were identical,
that 102 of its writers were the same and that the page layout
and contents of reporting and cartoons were also of similar
nature. The newspaper was not invited, before the verdict was
passed, to make a defense.
The court order concluded that under the evidence obtained, "it
is obvious that Ozgur Ulke is a continuation of Ozgur Gundem and
under these circumstance, according to paragraph 2/2 of Press Law
article 5680 it should be confiscated." Policemen relaying the
order to newspaper executives said this effectively "outlawed"
the publication and if Ozgur Ulke continued to print, its
editorial board would be placed under immediate arrest. Judicial
authorities speaking to Ozgur Ulke executives said they would
have preferred not to carry out the order but that they were
under "high level pressure" and feared that if they failed to
close the paper down, it would be dealt with "in extra-judicial
ways."
Attorneys for Ozgur Ulke said Friday that the arbitrary nature of
the verdicts had not even allowed time for a higher court to look
into the issue whereas the closure order could have been returned
if they were allowed to voice their defense.
Further Persecution:
Friday's verdict comes after a massive crackdown against Ozgur
Ulke.
On Nov.30, 1994, Prime Minister Ciller issued a secret decree (an
authentic copy was later later obtained and published in the
Turkish press) for the "elimination" of the newspaper after
which, on Dec.3, 1994, its four-story printing facility and
headquarters in Istanbul and its Ankara bureau were bombed. One
person was killed and 18 others were injured in the explosions.
Yet, Ozgur Ulke continued to print in other facilities. In the
first week of January 1995, the National Security Council took a
decision to "prevent the newspaper from print" but emphasized
that this should be done "within the boundaries of law. As of
Jan.6, 1995, policemen started to wait outside printing
facilities to confiscate the paper as soon as it was printed.
Copies of the paper were then taken to a Prosecutor working
around the clock and "inspected." Undesirable items, often some
three to four pages of the paper devoted to human rights, were
censored and it had to reprint with blank spots.
In several cases, the same issue of the newspaper was re-censored
three times, each targeting a new report. Meanwhile, at least
five reporters were detained and tortured by the police while its
Diyarbakir office and other offices were raided. Journalists were
"kidnapped" by the police and tortured. Some were tortured to
sign false "confessions" against the newspaper's editorial board!
Ozgur Ulke and its alleged predecessor Ozgur Gundem have been a
major target for Turkish "censorship" often taking the form of
violent attacks. Prior to this recent "campaign," 20 Ozgur Ulke
reporters and distributors were killed by "unidentified" death
squads and four reporters were kidnapped. The mutilated body of
one of the reporters was found weeks later after being tortured
and shot. At least 35 journalists and workers of the newspaper
have been imprisoned and 238 issues have been seized. The latest
campaign, however, is different in context and it was clear from
the very beginning that it aimed to close down the newspaper
altogether.
>Item Ends
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