Turkey Crackdown Chronicle: Week of June 10

Campaign posters for Turkey's elections are seen in Istanbul in June 2018. The press crackdown continues, with more journalists arrested or charged for reporting critically. (Reuters/Osman Orsal)

Campaign posters for Turkey's elections are seen in Istanbul in June 2018. The press crackdown continues, with more journalists arrested or charged for reporting critically. (Reuters/Osman Orsal)

Journalist arrested
A court on June 11 ordered Berzan Güneş, a reporter for the pro-Kurdish Mezopotamya news agency, to be arrested pending trial, his employer reported. The indictment accused Güneş of “making propaganda for a [terrorist] organisation” and presented as evidence the journalist’s social media posts, going back to 2014, according to the report. The posts included news stories about Turkish military activity in the Syrian cities of Kobane and Afrin, and a report by the journalist Robert Fisk. Prosecutors claimed in the indictment that Güneş could not be found to testify during an investigation into him. The journalist’s lawyer denied that claim and said his client offered testimony when he was called, according to reports.

Detention period extended

A lawyer for Ece Sevim Öztürk, the chief editor of Çağdaş Ses, a pro-opposition CHP (Republican People’s Party) news website, said on June 13 that prosecutors extended Öztürk’s detention period for another week, the independent news website Bianet reported.

Police detained Öztürk in Istanbul on June 8. Authorities have not provided a reason for her arrest, according to her lawyers.

Öztürk was detained shortly after the ultranationalist news website Odatv and pro-government daily Yeni Şafak accused her of being involved with the so-called FETÖ group, which the government blames for the failed attempted coup in 2016, Çağdaş Ses reported.

In a statement released today, the journalist’s lawyers said she was not questioned during her first week in custody, Çağdaş Ses reported. The lawyers added that Öztürk reported on the failed coup using available sources such as court documents, and has practiced nothing but journalism.

Öztürk, who has 65,000 Twitter followers, reports on allegations about the failed coup attempt.

Turkey bans Periscope

A court ruled that access to Twitter’s live video sharing platform, Periscope, is to be blocked in Turkey due to copyright violation, the Globe Post reported on June 12. The court found in favour of a local communication and production company named Periskop (Periscope in Turkish) which filed a complaint against the platform.

Journalists in court

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