Turkey: Global appeal marks 2000 days in prison for Nedim Türfent

Turkey: Global appeal marks 2000 days in prison for Nedim Türfent

November 7, 2021 disabled comments

EMBARGOED UNTIL 00.01 GMT ON 3 NOVEMBER 2021

‘There are so many injustices in our country that I hesitate to make statements on such specific days. On the other hand, it is easier to shine a light on injustices, unlawfulness and unfairness through known examples. This is why I see the 2000 days imprisonment as a symbol of the greater injustice in the country. It is imperative that there should be some sensitivity, not only for my own situation, but also for all prisoners who have been deprived of their freedom because of their opinions and their right to engage in politics. On the occasion of this day, I call upon all national and international rights organizations to show solidarity with all those imprisoned because of their thoughts, words and identities.’
Nedim Türfent, 22 October 2021

3 November 2021– 54 organisations urge once again the Turkish authorities to immediately and unconditionally release news editor, reporter and poet Nedim Türfent, and to overturn his conviction. Today marks 2000 days since he was arrested and subsequently sentenced to eight years and nine months in prison on trumped-up terrorism charges following an unfair trial, during which scores of witnesses said they had been tortured into testifying against him.

A news editor and reporter at the now-closed pro-Kurdish Dicle News Agency (DİHA), Nedim Türfent was detained on 12 May 2016 shortly after reporting on Turkish special police forces’ ill-treatment of Kurdish workers. Soon after his video footage was released, Türfent began receiving death threats from the police and was the target of an online harassment campaign. He was formally charged with ‘membership of a terrorist organisation’ one day after his arrest; the indictment was first produced 10 months later. He spent almost two years in solitary confinement in harrowing detention conditions.

‘Today marks another painful milestone in Nedim Türfent’s gross miscarriage of justice. That he has now spent 2000 days behind bars simply for doing his job beggars belief. As a first step towards rectifying this injustice, the Turkish authorities must release him immediately and unconditionally and urgently quash his conviction. Türfent’s application before the European Court of Human Rights is still pending, three years after being lodged, and we trust that the Court can prioritize the case. The PEN Community stands once again by Türfent and all the writers and journalists wrongfully imprisoned in Turkey and will keep advocating for their freedom until every single one of them is released’, said Ma Thida, Chair of PEN International’s Writers in Prison Committee.

Among the reasons listed in the indictment were Türfent’s social media posts, his news reporting and 20 concealed witness testimonies. His first hearing was held in Hakkari on 14 June 2017, some 200 km away from Van where he was being detained. He was denied the right to appear physically in court seven times, and instead testified via the judicial conferencing system SEGBİS, experiencing severe connection and interpretation issues. Out of the 20 witnesses called, 19 retracted their statements, saying they had been extracted under torture.

‘Today, we pass another milestone of injustice without end for Nedim, punished for his courage as a reporter. Nedim has spent 2000 days behind bars waiting for freedom. 2000 days he should never have lost and can never regain. Hundreds more journalists have been similarly targeted by a judiciary weaponised to silence dissent. We have twice asked the Constitutional Court to prioritize Nedim’s appeal to bring a swift end to this gross violation of rights. We trust that this time they will act,’ said Renan Akyavaş, IPI Turkey Programme Coordinator.

Despite such clear evidence of flagrant fair trial violations, Türfent was sentenced to eight years and nine months in prison for ‘membership of a terrorist organisation’ and ‘spreading terrorist propaganda’ on 15 December 2017. The sentence was approved by the Court of Cassation on 9 May 2020. His application before the Constitutional Court is still pending, more than three years after being lodged.His lawyers appealed to the European Court of Human Rights on 5 February 2019.

‘Nedim has been punished for his journalism which should have been awarded. The injustices that Nedim faces are injustices the majority of Kurdish journalists face in Turkey. That is why we call on every person and institution that sincerely stands for freedom of expression to stand with Nedim,’ said Murat Kök, Media and Law Studies Association (MLSA) Project and Communications Coordinator.

Ülkemizde o kadar çok adaletsizlik var ki insan bu tür spesifik günlerde bir açıklama yapmaya çekiniyor. Ama şöyle de bir gerçek var bazen bilinir örnekler üzerinden adaletsizliğe, hukuksuzluğa, haksızlığa kaynak tutmak daha kolay oluyor. Bu yüzden, bu 2000 günlük mahpusluğu ülkedeki adaletsizlik fotoğrafının büyük bir sembolü olarak ele alıyorum.Sadece kendi durumum değil, düşünceleri ve siyaset yapma hakları yüzünden özgürlüklerinden alıkonulan bütün mahpuslar için bir duyarlılık oluşması elzemdir. Bugün vesilesi ile gerek ulusal gerekse de uluslararası hak ve özgürlük kuruluşlarını düşünceleri, sözleri ve kimliklerinden dolayı tutsak edilen insanlarla dayanışmaya çağırıyorum.
Nedim Türfent’in 22.10.2021 Mesajı

3 Kasım 2021 –54uluslararası ve yerel basın ve ifade özgürlüğü kuruluşu, Türkiyeli yetkilileri bir kez daha gazeteci ve şair Nedim Türfent’i derhal ve koşulsuz bir şekilde tahliye etmeye ve hakkındaki mahkumiyet kararını bozmaya çağırıyor. Bugün, Nedim’in düzmece terör suçlamalarıyla tutuklanıp, dinlenen tanıkların büyük bölümünün ifadelerini işkence altında verdiklerini beyan ettikleri adil olmayan bir yargılama sonucunda sekiz yıl dokuz ay hapse mahkum edilmesinin 2000. günü.

Kanun Hükmünde Kararname ile kapatılan Dicle Haber Ajansı (DİHA) haber editörü ve muhabiri Nedim Türfent, özel harekat polislerinin Kürt işçilere kötü muamelesini haberleştirdikten kısa bir süre sonra, 12 Mayıs 2016 tarihinde gözaltına alındı. Nedim, haberi yayınlandıktan kısa bir süre sonra emniyet mensuplarından ölüm tehditleri almaya başladı ve çevrimiçi bir taciz operasyonunun hedefi haline geldi. Tutuklandıktan bir gün sonra “terör örgütü üyeliği” ile suçlandı; hakkındaki iddianame ise 10 ay sonra hazırlandı. İki yıl boyunca korkunç şartlar altında tecrit edildi.

‘Bugün, Nedim Türfent’in maruz kaldığı büyük adaletsizliğin bir diğer önemli ve acı verici kilometre taşı. Sadece mesleğini yaptığı için parmaklıklar arkasında 2000 gün geçirmiş olması inanılır gibi değil. Bu adaletsizliği düzeltmek için Türkiyeli yetkililer Nedim’i derhal ve koşulsuz olarak tahliye etmeli ve hakkında verilen mahkumiyet kararını bozmalıdır. PEN Topluluğu, Türkiye’de haksız bir şekilde hapsedilmiş tüm yazar ve gazetecilerin ve Nedim’in yanındadır ve her biri serbest bırakılana kadar onların özgürlüğü için mücadele etmeye devam edecektir.’ Ma Thida, Pen International Mahpus Yazarlar Komitesi Başkanı

Nedim hakkında hazırlanan iddianamede, sosyal medya paylaşımları, yazdığı haberler ve 20 gizli tanığın ifadeleri suçlamalara delil gösteriliyor. Yargılandığı davanın ilk duruşması 14 Haziran 2017’de, tutuklu bulunduğu Van’dan 200 km uzaklıkta Hakkari’de görüldü. Nedim’in duruşmada fiziksel olarak hazır bulunma talebi yedi kez reddedildi ve ifadesini SEGBİS ile vermek zorunda kaldı. 20 tanıktan 19’u ifadelerini işkence altında verdiklerini söyledi ve ifadelerini geri çekti.

‘Bugün, Nedim’in bir gazeteci olarak cesareti için cezalandırıldığı sonu olmayan adaletsizliğin önemli bir dönüm noktasını daha arkamızda bırakıyoruz. Nedim, özgürlüğü bekleyerek 2000 günü parmaklıklar arkasında geçirdi. Asla kaybetmemesi gereken ve asla geri alamayacağı 2000 gün. Eleştirel sesleri susturmak için bir silah haline getirilmiş yargı tarafından yüzlerce gazeteci aynı şekilde hedef alındı. Anayasa Mahkemesine bu büyük adaletsizliği sonlandırmak için Nedim’in başvurusuna öncelik vermesi gerektiğini iki kez ilettik. Bu sefer harekete geçeceklerine inanıyoruz. ‘- Renan Akyavaş, Uluslararası Basın Enstitüsü (IPI) Türkiye Program Koordinatörü

Bu kadar bariz adil yargılanma hakkı ihlallerine rağmen, Nedim 15 Aralık 2017 tarihinde ‘terör örgütü üyeliği’ ve ‘terör örgütü propagandası yapmak’ suçlarından sekiz yıl dokuz ay hapis cezasına çarptırıldı. Yargıtay ise 9 Mayıs 2020 tarihinde Nedim’in cezasını onadı. Üç yıl geçmesine rağmen Nedim’in Anayasa Mahkemesine yaptığı başvuru hala mahkeme önünde bekliyor.

‘Nedim, ödüllendirilmesi gereken gazeteciliği için cezalandırıldı. Nedim’in maruz kaldığı adaletsizlikler aslında Türkiye’de Kürt gazetecilerin büyük çoğunluğunun maruz kaldığı adaletsizliklerdir. Bu yüzden samimi olarak ifade özgürlüğünü savunan tüm kişi ve kurumları Nedim ile dayanışmaya davet ediyoruz.’Murat Kök, Medya ve Hukuk Çalışmaları Derneği (MLSA) Proje ve İletişim Koordinatörü

For further details contact / Daha fazla bilgi almak için iletişim adresleri:

Renan Akyavaş, Uluslararası Basın Enstitüsü (IPI): rakyavas@ipi.media
Mümtaz Murat Kök Medya ve Hukuk Çalışmaları Derneği (MLSA): murat@medyavehukuk.org
Aurélia Dondo, PEN International: Aurelia.dondo@pen-international.org

SIGNATURES / İMZACILAR

International Press Institute / Uluslararası Basın Enstitüsü (IPI)
Media and Law Studies Association / Medya ve Hukuk Çalışmaları Derneği (MLSA)
PEN International
Albanian PEN
ARTICLE 19
Articolo 21
Association of European Journalists (AEJ)
Cartoonists Rights Network International (CRNI)
Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
Croatian PEN
Danish PEN
English PEN
European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF)
European Federation of Journalists (EFJ)
French PEN
German PEN
Human Rights Association (HRA)/ İnsan Hakları Derneği (IHD)
IFEX
Index on Censorship
Initiative for Freedom of Expression/ Düşünçe Suçu?!na Karşı Girişim
Irish PEN/PEN na hÉireann
Kurdish PEN
Montenegrin PEN Center
OBC Transeuropa (OBCT)
PEN America
PEN Bangladesh
PEN Belgium (French-speaking)
PEN Centre of Bosnia & Herzegovina
PEN Esperanto
PEN Estonia
PEN Georgia
PEN Iraq
PEN Latvia
PEN Malta
PEN Melbourne
PEN Moscow
PEN Netherlands
PEN Norway
PEN Portugal
PEN Québec
PEN Romania
PEN Suisse Romand
PEN Trieste
PEN Turkey
Perth PEN Centre
Russian PEN
San Miguel de Allende PEN
Slovene PEN
South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO)
St Petersburg PEN
Swedish PEN
Turkey Human Rights Litigation Support Project/Türkiye İnsan Hakları Davalarına DestekProjesi
Vietnamese Abroad PEN centre
Wales PEN Cymru

Interview with SEEMO Member Alfred Lela (October 2021)

October 23, 2021 disabled comments

Alfred Lela is the author and anchor of Politiko, a political talk show on Top NEWS. He is the founder of Politiko. al. From 2010-2017 he worked for Media MAPO, as Deputy Editor-in-Chief for the daily MAPO, Editor-in-Chief for MAPO magazine, and Executive Director of Media Mapo. In 2012, he won the Teodor Keko Award and in 2013 the At Zef Pllumi Award. He is the author of two books: ‘Secilit Shqipërinë e Tij’ (2013), and ‘Fjalori Politik i Berishës’ (2018). He holds a Ph.D. in Communication from the European University of Tirana and a BA in Journalism from the University of Tirana. In recent years he has lectured in Journalism and Political Communication at both Universities he graduated from.

Your first job as a journalist?
A local project when I was still in high school. It was a monthly magazine of Kruja district, near the capital.

You worked as Deputy Editor-in-Chief for the daily MAPO, Editor-in-Chief for MAPO magazine, and Executive Director of MM. Please present us a little more this period in your professional work.
For seven years I did basically everything in the editorial ladder: covering the profiles page, the news from the districts, Op-Ed pages. Later on, I was editor-in-chief of the monthly Mapo magazine which I remember fondly since a reporter gets the chance to do something into the depths of reporting not just the hour-after-hour covering of the news.
To summarize I can say that today’s journalism requires more than one particular skill set. We are experiencing the universal journalist and this is tied to, of course, financial and hence the human resources. The newsrooms have fewer bodies to send out to cover the news and more genres to represent the news in. So, the math is there and when you do it you have to understand that one kind of expertise doesn’t cut it.

You are founder of Politiko.al. What is Politiko.al ?
It is an online gazette, so to speak. A news website or portal. It was founded back in March 2017 after an editorial line switch by my then publisher (Mapo). It was a hard transition but the right one at the same time. We cover mostly politics, as the name suggests, and we do some explaining of political events and of course Op-Ed pieces.

You received also two awards….
Yes, one for my reporting and one for a book of essays, basically profiles I had written on news-breaking individuals here in Albania.

What are you doing today?
I have my own TV political show named Politiko on Top News. And I keep my eyes and hands-on Politiko.al, of course.
I have a book coming out soon too.

What is the situation with media outside Tirana, in the province?
There are voices to be sure, allowed by the online boom but not strong enough to make a difference. There are projects also, mainly supports of EU institutions, US Embassy, different European foundations like Konrad Adenauer, etc, but not yet sustainability. So, yes, we have a landscape but not yet voices of authority.

Where do you see Albania in 10 years?
Demographically weak, politically still experimenting, socially diverse but chaotic. As far as the media goes, I think that freedom of speech will be there but the burden of it too. I mean too much info, but not enough news, a lot of ‘news’ but most of it propaganda. And what I dread the most, the political elite doing everything to corrupt the media and then saying that ‘yes, politics is corrupt but who isn’t’.

Finally, did journalism had an influence on your private life?
Of course, I think more than any other – journalism being a public endeavour affects you and your surroundings. But I can’t complain. You do get to affect people with your job and in return, you should expect your job to affect you also.

9 October 2021: Result of the Mission to Turkey

October 10, 2021 disabled comments

Turkey’s press freedom crisis is being compounded by increasing digital censorship, a group of international press freedom, journalism and human rights groups said following a joint mission to the country this week.

The government has announced plans to table a “disinformation” law that is likely to result in the further criminalization of freedom of expression and independent journalism online. Although a draft of the law has not yet been published, meetings with journalists and MPs confirmed that it is expected to introduce criminal penalties – and possibly jail sentences – for those who spread “disinformation” online. The law would cement the government’s control over one of the last major spaces for free expression in Turkey and, in combination with last year’s social media law, increase pressure on social media companies to become complicit in Turkey’s censorship regime.

While government officials have stated that the law would be modeled on measures passed in other countries, particularly Germany, this comparison is false: the German NetzDG law does not regulate – let alone criminalize – “disinformation”. Moreover, even as press freedom groups have criticized German legislation regulating social media platforms, Germany’s independent judiciary can offer redress in the case of rights violations. Turkey’s courts, meanwhile, are not independent and do not provide protection against the abuse of such laws.

Meanwhile, the mission found an alarming rise in government efforts to discredit independent media that receive foreign funding. This has recently culminated in a bill introduced by an MHP MP proposing mandatory registration for organizations and individuals that receive funding from or are “influenced” by foreign entities. Regardless of whether this particular bill will ultimately pass, it signals that the issue of pressuring foreign-funded organizations is on the government’s agenda. This is an alarming prospect in an environment in which Turkey’s remaining independent media are already demonized and face financial pressure in a heavily captured media market.

Mission delegates discussed the various law proposals with opposition MPs of both the Human Rights Investigative Commission and Digital Platforms Commission of the Turkish parliament. The chairs of the two commissions from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) did not respond positively to requests for a meeting.

Led by the International Press Institute (IPI) and IPI’s Turkey National Committee, the mission included representatives from ARTICLE 19, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), English PEN, the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF), Human Rights Watch (HRW), Norwegian PEN, Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Transeuropa (OBCT), PEN International, Reporters without Borders (RSF), and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO).

From October 4 to 8, mission delegates met in Ankara and Istanbul, as well as online, with editors, journalists, local civil society groups, Turkish MPs from various political parties, members of government regulatory bodies, foreign diplomats from 23 countries, European Union officials, representatives of leading global tech companies and Turkey’s Constitutional Court.

The meetings confirmed an ever-worsening environment for Turkey’s remaining independent press ahead of planned presidential and parliamentary elections scheduled for 2023. In addition to the threat of growing digital censorship, journalists continue to face arbitrary prosecution and judicial harassment through anti-terror, defamation, and other laws. There has been a profound erosion of the rule of law in the country, and the judiciary is largely politicized and unable – with the partial exception of the Constitutional Court – to protect fundamental rights. Indeed, virtually all interviewees highlighted the lack of an independent judiciary as the root of Turkey’s press freedom problems. Despite a judicial reform strategy announced with much fanfare two years ago, little progress has been made to reverse this situation.

In a meeting with Turkey’s Constitutional Court (TCC), which despite the overall climate continues to play a key role in protecting fundamental rights, the mission urged the TCC to speed up decisions involving violations of press freedom. Mission delegates noted that many of the TCC’s positive rulings have nevertheless come late for the victims. In some cases the TCC has not yet issued a ruling despite a severe ongoing rights violation, including the detention of journalists. The refusal by lower courts, in a number of cases, to implement Constitutional Court decisions was also a central topic of discussion.
Meetings also confirmed that political capture of state institutions extends beyond the courts to include key regulatory bodies such as the Radio and Television High Council (RTÜK). İlhan Taşci, a RTÜK member nominated by the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), told the delegation that the independent television broadcasters faced a growing number of arbitrary fines and broadcast bans, even as pro-government media almost never face sanctions despite public complaints. The mission had requested an official meeting with the RTÜK chair, nominated by the AKP party, but did not receive a response.

The delegation also raised concerns in its meetings over the rising number of physical attacks on journalists in Turkey and corresponding impunity for the assailants. The mission urged members of the Parliamentary Human Rights Investigative Commission to specifically examine this issue on a cross-party basis.

In view of the global problem of increased surveillance of journalists by governments, the delegation also raised concerns about the apparent absence of parliamentary oversight of the use of surveillance technology by Turkey, including against journalists..

In briefings with the European Union delegation as well as representatives from 23 foreign embassies, the mission – while acknowledging existing efforts – called for stronger public solidarity with journalists under attack as well as more robust criticism of Turkey’s co-opting of the digital space through the social media and “disinformation” laws.

For the first time, the international mission did not receive a positive reply for a meeting from any government office. Requests to the justice minister and transportation and infrastructure minister as well as the communications directorate of the presidential office did not receive a response. The Council of State declined a meeting. This prevented an exchange of views with representatives of the government on these critical topics and precludes the mission from directly including their government’s perspective in a full report to be published later this autumn.

Turkey-Mission 2021 – Photo: International Press Institute Twitter @globalfreemedia

6 October 2021: Mission to Turkey

A coalition of international press freedom and journalist groups will carry out a three-day mission to Turkey this week to investigate serious, continued threats to independent journalism in the country.
From October 6 to 8, mission delegates will meet in Ankara and Istanbul, as well as online, with editors, journalists, local civil society groups, Turkish MPs from various political parties, members of government regulatory bodies, foreign diplomats, European Union officals, representatives of leading global tech companies, and the Turkish Constitutional Court.

Led by the International Press Institute (IPI) and IPI’s Turkey National Committee, the mission includes representatives from ARTICLE 19, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), English PEN, the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF), Human Rights Watch (HRW), Norwegian PEN, Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Transeuropa (OBCT), PEN International, Reporters without Borders (RSF), and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO).

The mission will hold a press conference at 16:00 Turkey time (15:00 CEST) on Friday, October 8 to share the results of the meetings and the partner organisations‘ analysis of the state of press freedom in Turkey.

The press conference will also be held online here:

https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_NVDJb3WFR5qmOAo3OIYb5w.

The conference will be held in Turkish and English with interpretation for online participants.

Turkey-Mission 2021 – Photo: International Press Institute Twitter @globalfreemedia