The Herald (South Africa)

Turkish journalist­s’ ‘terror’ trial raises fears

- Bulent Kilic and Stuart Williams

STAFF from one of Turkey’s most respected opposition newspapers rejected “terror” charges against them as absurd yesterday, on the first day of a trial which has intensifie­d alarm over press freedom under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The 17 defendants from the Cumhuriyet (Republic) daily were detained from October last year and a dozen of them have now spent more than eight months in jail without being convicted of any crime.

They have been held under a state of emergency imposed after the failed coup in July last year aimed at ousting Erdogan, which the authoritie­s blamed on US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen.

The staff – including writers, cartoonist­s and executives – were applauded by supporters crammed into the Istanbul courtroom as the trial opened.

Supporters outside the courthouse chanted: “Don’t be silenced! A free media is a right!”

If convicted, the defendants face varying terms of up to 43 years in jail.

In an extraordin­ary coincidenc­e, the trial opened on Turkey’s annual national day of the press, which marks the end of official censorship in the Ottoman Empire in 1908 under Sultan Abdulhamid II.

Those appearing in court included some of the best known names in Turkish journalism, including the columnist Kadri Gursel, the paper’s editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu and cartoonist Musa Kart, as well as its chairman Akin Atalay.

They are charged with supporting in the newspaper’s writings three groups considered by Turkey as terror outfits – the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), the ultra-left Revolution­ary People’s Liberation Party- Front (DHKP-C) and Gulen’s movement, which Ankara calls the Fethullah Terror Organisati­on (FETO).

The indictment accuses Cumhuriyet of beginning a “perception operation” with the aim of starting an “asymmetric war” against Erdogan. But supporters insist the paper has always been bitterly critical of the three groups, including Gulen’s organisati­on. Gulen denies any link to the failed coup. Atalay said it was the authoritie­s who were scared.

“But Cumhuriyet will not give in . . . independen­ce and liberty are written into the DNA of the paper.”

Cumhuriyet, set up in 1924, is Turkey’s oldest mainstream national title. It is one of the few genuine opposition voices in the press, which is dominated by strongly pro-government media and bigger mainstream dailies that are increasing­ly wary of challengin­g the authoritie­s.

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