Click to read the article in Turkish
The Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has written that the Anti-Terror Law is used in Turkey to intimidate and silence journalists.
In a news article titled, "Journalists threatened with imprisonment under Turkey's terrorism law," the RSF has said:
"At least ten journalists, including the Turkey Representative of Reporters Without Borders (RSF), are due to appear in court during the next few weeks on charges under Turkey's terrorism law, known as the TMK, which has been used for the past 20 years to intimidate and silence reporters and media that don't toe the official line on the Kurdish issue."
The RSF has then moved on to give examples from the court cases against several journalists, including RSF Turkey Representative and BİA Media Monitoring Rapporteur Erol Önderoğlu, Melis Alphan, Murat Çelikkan, Ayşe Düzkan, Sibel Hürtaş, Abdurrahman Gök, Canan Coşkun, Ali Açar and Cansever Uğur, who will appear in court in the upcoming weeks.
Some of the details shared by the RSF are as follows:
'She faces 7.5 years over a single photo'
"The first victim will be Melis Alphan, a journalist specialising in covering conjugal violence, who will face a possible sentence of seven years and six months in prison for a single photo when she appears before an Istanbul court on 6 April.
"A former columnist for the daily Hürriyet, she is charged under article 7 of the TMK with 'propaganda for a terrorist organization' for publishing a photo of Newroz (Kurdish New Year) celebrations in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir in March 2015 in which the flags of the armed separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) could be seen. The Turkish government regards the PKK as a terrorist group.
"Alphan is one of the many journalists to be prosecuted under the TMK since it took effect in 1991. Under this law, journalists can end up in prison for writing an article, sharing a photo or posting a tweet that does no more than allude to the highly sensitive Kurdish issue, without ever having condoned the use of Kurdish separatist violence.
"RSF's Turkey representative, Erol Önderoglu, is another of its victims. Along with Sebnem Korur Fincanci, a physician, and Ahmet Nesin, a journalist living in self-imposed exile, he has been charged for the past five years with 'propaganda for a terrorist organization,' 'praising a crime or criminal' and 'inciting a crime.' All three face a possible sentence of 14 years, six months in prison in a trial before an Istanbul court that is due to start on 6 May.
"Their crime was to have participated in a solidarity campaign in support of the beleaguered pro-Kurdish daily Özgür Gündem. They were acquitted on these charges in July 2019 but their acquittal was quashed last October. More than 20 journalists, writers and intellectuals who participated in this solidarity campaign have been convicted in the past four years.
"Five other journalists are currently facing possible jail terms under the TMK. One is Sibel Hürtaş, the Ankara correspondent of Arti TV, a critical TV channel, who is being prosecuted because she invited the pro-Kurdish parliamentarian Osman Baydemir on to her show and he used it to criticize Turkey's military operations against the Afrin enclave in northern Syria.
"The photo-journalist Abdurrahman Gök will appear in court in Diyarbakir on 3 June on charges of belonging to the PKK and 'propagandising for the PKK' in his articles and tweets.
"The other three journalists, Canan Coşkun, Ali Açar and Cansever Uğur, will appear in court in Istanbul on 8 June, when they will face up to three years in prison under article 6 of the TMK on a charge of 'revealing or publishing the identity of state representatives involved in combatting terrorism and/or identifying them as targets'."
Turkey is ranked 154th out of 180 countries in the Reporters Without Borders' (RSF) 2020 World Press Freedom Index. (HA/SD)