Arab News

Female-only news agency accused of making ‘terror propaganda’ Journalist­s reject claim and vow to continue working

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DIYARBAKIR: A news website in the Kurdishmaj­ority Turkish city of Diyarbakir, staffed only by women, has been repeatedly shut down by the authoritie­s over alleged terror propaganda but it is refusing to give up the fight to publish.

Jin News Agency, from the Kurdish word for woman “Jin,” focuses on Kurdish and women’s issues and publishes in Kurdish, Turkish, Arabic and English.

Written for women, it is run by a female-only team from the accountant to the photograph­er, and editors to camerawome­n.

The agency, set up in 2012, has come under pressure from the Turkish authoritie­s who have closed it twice and shut off access to the agency seven times.

Turkish authoritie­s accuse the agency of making “terror propaganda” for the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged an insurgency against Turkey since 1984.

The PKK is proscribed as a terror group by Ankara and its Western allies and since the breakdown of a cease-fire in 2015 Turkey has launched a relentless crackdown against the group.

The crackdown has been wide, with media seen as sympatheti­c to the PKK finding themselves in the crosshairs of the authoritie­s.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has argued there is no difference between a “terrorist holding a gun or a bomb or those who use their pen to serve their aims.”

Turkey stepped up the campaign after the failed July 2016 coup attempt, with dozens of media outlets accused of links to putschists and the PKK closed down.

There are currently six legal cases against Jin News Agency accusing it of “terror propaganda.” Its website is blocked in Turkey.

The agency rejects the accusation­s and says that the issue is one of press freedom.

It is continuing to publish news but the articles can only be read on social media and accessible via Virtual Private Networks (VPN).

Camerawoma­n Beritan Elyakut, based in Diyarbakir and working for the agency for five years, complained the website was unable to “reach the outside world.”

“What else can we do?” she added as she filmed a story ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8, saying the website used six different domain names “but closures continued uninterrup­ted.”

The latest website domain, jinnews7.com, was blocked in Turkey on Feb. 22 after AFP spoke to Elyakut.

The website, funded by subscripti­ons, tackles topics that are off limits for Turkish media, including the fate of Abdullah Ocalan the PKK leader jailed for life by Turkey for terror offenses.

It has offered its critical take on Turkey’s offensive against Kurdish militia in Syria and has also written about the disappeara­nce in Iraq last year of two Turkish agents.

Critics say that the government has widened the definition of “terror propaganda” to an absurd width. But officials insist the measures are needed with the country fighting multiple terror groups.

After the the news site was shut down the first time, the women journalist­s renamed the agency “Sujin” meaning “packing needle” in Kurdish.

But in August 2017, Sujin was shut down by another emergency decree and they then renamed themselves Jin News.

While it once had 60 journalist­s in text, photo and video working for the agency across the country including Istanbul, Ankara and the Aegean city of Izmir, this has now fallen to 25. Eight women work in the Diyarbakir office but most work from home.

“Women are persecuted, and as a women’s news agency we must show this,” said Safiye Alagas, a photograph­er who has been working with the agency for six years, adding that it had “become a target” as a result.

 ??  ?? Jin News Agency reporter Durket Suren, who was reportedly detained in Lice district of Diyarbakir province on the ground that a ‘search’ decision has been issued against her. (Photo courtesy: Jin News Agency/file)
Jin News Agency reporter Durket Suren, who was reportedly detained in Lice district of Diyarbakir province on the ground that a ‘search’ decision has been issued against her. (Photo courtesy: Jin News Agency/file)

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