"Free press is a requirement of democracy"(Photo: Eylem Nazlıer / Evrensel)
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Today, January 10, marks the Working Journalists Day in Turkey.
On this occasion, the Journalists' Union of Turkey (TGS) released a written statement yesterday. Stressing the fact that "the unemployment rate has topped 35 percent in the media sector", the Union has underlined that "January 10 must be considered a day of struggle."
Referring to the current situation in Turkey, the TGC has said:
There is nothing to celebrate in an environment where 34 journalists are held in prisons, critical journalists are punished via the Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK) and Press Advertisement Institution (BİK), around 90 percent are employed precariously and without a union, freedom of press and expression is restricted and journalists have to defend their news at courthalls almost every day.
The Union has listed the following developments in breach of freedom of expression and press in Turkey in 2021:
Why is January 10 celebrated?The Press Law no. 212 was enacted by the Coup Administration on January 4, 1961 in the period following the military coup on May 27, 1960. Granting journalists a series of freedoms and rights including job security and improvement of their working conditions, the law was protested by newspaper owners, who decided not to publish newspapers for three days. In response, on January 10, journalists organized a march to lay claim to their rights and freedom of press and published the newspaper "BASIN" (Press) on January 11-12-13, 1961. Until the coup on March 12, 1971, January 10 had been celebrated as "the Working Journalists' Festival." After the coup, the day was stripped off its "festival" quality and started to be called "Working Journalists' Day." |
(RT/SD)