Because the decision was not delivered to him, lawyer Meric Tumer could not appeal the decision taken on December 30, 2003.
Lawyer Tumer who went and personally received the court decision, will appeal it in the coming days.
An Adana court had sentenced journalist Ozic to a year in prison for what he said on the local radio station "Radio World," on February 24, 2003 when the cabinet of ministers sent a motion to the parliament. The motion was about sending Turkish troops to Iraq and accepting foreign troops in Turkey.
The reporter was charged with "insulting the parliament," and was sentenced on grounds of article 159 of the Turkish Penal Code.
The court refused to reduce or postpone the sentence saying the journalist could repeat the same crime.
Ozic was sentenced because of what he said during the program called "Captain's Cruise Journal," at the time he owned the radio.
The journalist had said that intervening in Iraq would not be a legitimate action, and that it would be a terrorist action like every illegitimate action. He also drew attention to the fact that President Ahmet Necdet Sezer had advocated the necessity of a United Nations resolution for the action.
"If the decision to send soldiers to a terrorist action and to accept soldiers in will come from the parliament, then this parliament is a terrorist parliament," Ozic had said during the radio program. (EO/BB/EA/NM)