Yahoo News.jpeg

 

 

Journalists charged with spying over claims Turkey supplied arms to Syrian
militants

 

 

Agamoni Ghosh, International Business Times, New York, in Yahoo News, 27
November 2015

 

An Istanbul court has charged two Turkish journalists with espionage and
aiding a terrorist organisation for publishing a story which claimed that
Turkey's secret services had sent arms to Islamist rebels in Syria
<https://uk.news.yahoo.com/syria/> . The lawsuit was filed by none other
than President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in which he alleged that the daily
Cumhuriyet had engaged in acts of espionage by publishing what authorities
considered a false claim. The journalists, Can Dundar, the editor-in-chief,
and Erdem Gul, the paper's Ankara bureau chief, could face life imprisonment
if found guilty.

 

Can Dundar and Erdem Gul outside court.jpg

 

"Don't worry, this ruling is nothing but a badge of honour to us. They ask
us why we published that story. The history of journalism is full of such
examples as Watergate or Wikileaks that show states would like to keep some
facts secret. But it's for common good to bring them to light," Dundar, who
denied the allegations, told reporters. The charges have also been heavily
criticised by press freedom groups which said cases like these could
seriously damage Turkey's pledge to carry out EU reforms and the promised
standards of fundamental rights and freedoms.

 

Press freedom has been criticised in Turkey specially since Erdogan took
over. Last month the Turkish police arrested the editor of Zama
<http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/turkey-arrests-newspaper-editor-charges-insulting-
president-amid-crackdown-press-freedom-1523351> n for posting tweets
allegedly 'insulting' Erdogan.


In August, two British journalists and an Iraqi fixer working for Vice News
who were reporting on anti-government unrest in the Kurdish-dominated
south-east, were charged by a Turkish judge of "engaging in terrorist
activity" on behalf of the Islamic State. Although the journalists were
later released, the Iraqi translator was kept in detention.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) secretary general Christophe Deloire
criticised the current judgement and told AFP, "If these two journalists are
imprisoned, it will be additional evidence that the Turkish authorities are
ready to use methods worthy of a bygone age in order to suppress independent
journalism in Turkey." The Cumhuriyet daily was awarded the media watchdog's
2015 Press Freedom Prize just last week.

 

Arms-laden trucks

 

The newspaper had published footage on its website in May in which it showed
gendarmerie opening crates of what it described as weapons and ammunition on
the back of three trucks belonging to Turkey's secret service, Millî
İstihbarat Teşkilat (MIT), that were headed for Syria. Turkey's interior
ministry, however, denied the allegations and said the trucks were in
reality conveying humanitarian aid to the Turkmen community in the war-torn
country.

 

The video published was from 19 January, 2014 but the paper did not say how
it had obtained the footage. In addition, photographs were published by the
daily which showed several vehicles filled with weapons and ammunition,
stacked under boxes that had been labelled as 'medication'.

 

Furious over the allegations, Erdogan had said: "This paper has engaged in
acts of espionage. Whoever wrote this story will pay a heavy price for this.
I will not let this go." He said despite a national security law forbidding
such a search, the officers who had no authority to search MIT vehicles
still went ahead. The case saw the arrests of 26 soldiers.

 

Erdogan had said the action was on the orders of what he calls a "parallel
state" run by his ally-turned-foe Fethullah Gulen
<http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/turkey-puts-fethullah-gulen-most-wanted-terrorist-
list-1526305> , a US-based Islamic cleric who Erdogan says is bent on
discrediting him and the government. He accused the paper of
<http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/who-fethulah-gulen-why-does-turkeys-president-want
-him-prison-1480313>  abetting Gulen's movement and vowed to charge them for
spying.

 

The judgment has come at a time when Russia has
<http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/turkey-opposition-leader-says-russian-jet-attack-w
as-planned-1530542>  accused Turkey of abetting terrorism after it gunned
down a war plane on the Syria-Turkey border recently.

 

 

From:
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/turkey-journalists-charged-spying-over-054526114.h
tml#V8UI57P

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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