Turkey Crackdown Chronicle: Week of March 17, 2019

A campaign billboard for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), pictured in Ankara on March 8. Police on March 19 detained a reporter and questioned her about her work in the capital. (AFP/Adem Altan)

A campaign billboard for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), pictured in Ankara on March 8. Police on March 19 detained a reporter and questioned her about her work in the capital. (AFP/Adem Altan)

Evrensel journalist acquitted over Paradise Papers charge

Journalists detained covering weekly prison protest

Witnesses withdraw testimony against Jin News reporter

Two witnesses who previously testified against Jin News reporter Beritan Canözer, withdrew their statements at the first hearing in the trial in Diyarbakır on March 20, her employer reported. Canözer, who is free pending the outcome of the trial, pleaded not guilty to being a member of a [terrorist] organization” (PKK). Salih Ateş, a PKK member who attended the hearing via teleconference, said he did not know the journalist and that he was forced to sign the testimony against her. Beran Aslan, another witness, also withdrew his testimony and said he was tortured and forced to sign a testimony that was not his. The defence claimed the testimonies of other witnesses are contradictory and false, according to the report. The next hearing is scheduled for July 26.

Columnist Ahmet Altan guilty of insulting president, again

Ahmet Altan, a novelist, columnist, and founding chief editor of the shuttered liberal daily Taraf, was found guilty of “insulting the president” in a column, the news website T24 reported. The charge relates to a May 2016 column on P24, a sister publication to T24, on the attempted assassination of journalist Can Dündar. The Istanbul court sentenced Altan to 11 months and 20 days in prison, which was converted to a fine of 7,000 Turkish lira (US$1,289). Altan’s lawyers said they will appeal, according to the report.

Altan was sentenced last year to life without parole for his alleged coup involvement, and he has been convicted of insulting the president in other cases, according to CPJ research.

Reporter questioned over article on prosecutor’s criminal record

Seyhan Avşar, a reporter for the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet, is under investigation for “making targets of those assigned to combat terrorism,” for her report on a prosecutor convicted of soliciting bribes from suspects in a child molestation case, her employer reported on March 20.

According to Cumhuriyet, when prosecutors questioned Avşar she told them she had confirmed details of the charge and tried to contact the prosecutor in question, but that he did not return her calls.

Avşar’s lawyer, Nesrullah Oğuz, said that the law the journalist was accused of breaking is to protect civil servants and security personnel whose identities are secret, not a prosecutor whose identity is known publicly, according to the report.

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