Turkey Crackdown Chronicle: Week of June 17

People watch an election rally for President Erdoğan in Mardin, on June 20. An OSCE report released ahead of Turkey's elections highlights the restrictive environment for the press. (Reuters/Goran Tomasevic)

People watch an election rally for President Erdoğan in Mardin, on June 20. An OSCE report released ahead of Turkey's elections highlights the restrictive environment for the press. (Reuters/Goran Tomasevic)

Ahead of election, OSCE highlights restrictive media environment
In a report on Turkey’s elections this month, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said, “The media landscape is dominated by outlets whose owners are considered affiliated with the government or depend on public contracts.” The report added that Turkey’s constitution “Contains a general provision regarding the right to freedom of expression, but also restrains it by allowing restrictions on media, including under anti-terror and internet laws.”

Journalists arrested

President’s son uses court order to block news stories about him

An Istanbul court on June 19 ruled that access to 24 online news stories about the President’s son, Ahmet Burak Erdoğan, be blocked in the country, according to a tweet by academic and cyber rights activist Yaman Akdeniz. The court ruled that the news site violated the personal righs of Ahmet Erdoğan.

Ahmet Erdoğan filed a complaint to the court the previous day, after several news outlets reported on a political rally in which a presidential candidate from an opposition party made reference to a 1998 incident in which Ahmet Erdoğan hit a woman in his car, who later died. Erdoğan was acquitted of wrong doing in the case.

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