The Independent

Attacks on press freedom in Turkey are ever more blatant

The prosecutio­n of Abdurrahma­n Gok is just one case in an ongoing campaign of intimidati­on, writes Borzou Daragahi

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It is a shocking photograph, capturing the moment when a young Turkish man named Kemal Kurkut was shot dead by security forces at a checkpoint in the eastern city of Diyarbakir on 21 March 2017.

The photograph­er, Abdurrahma­n Gok, was lauded for capturing this incredibly disturbing moment. The agonising picture of the apparently unarmed man being shot from behind led to the prosecutio­n of two police officers and depicted the kind of abuse by Turkish law enforcemen­t that has led to calls around the world for reform and accountabi­lity.

Instead, the two police officers were acquitted, and it’s Gok who is being prosecuted on a charge of membership of a terrorist organisati­on and spreading terrorist propaganda. The preliminar­y hearing was held last Tuesday at a court in Diyarbakir, and the trial will resume in June.

The case against Gok has raised concerns among Turkish and internatio­nal press freedom advocates. While the photograph may not be the direct cause of his prosecutio­n, it was the attention the widely distribute­d picture brought that put him under the scrutiny of security forces. He was briefly detained in 2018, when his mobile phone was seized, and was charged last October, based on secret testimony from an unnamed informant, according to press freedom advocates.

Gok has had previous run-ins with the law, and has reported on the fight for Kurdish political rights, a sensitive topic for Turkish authoritie­s. Regardless, the situation for many journalist­s in Turkey remains dire. This week, dozens of journalist­s in Turkey face court dates, with some facing national security charges. Among the cases is the so-called Bloomberg trial, in which almost 40 financial journalist­s and media employees are being prosecuted over coverage of the country’s currency crisis in 2018.

In other cases, journalist­s are facing jail time for social media posts deemed “insulting” to the country’s leadership, or for reporting on police violence. The targets of the prosecutio­n are almost all journalist­s and news outlets that fail to toe the government line. The court cases have become a government tool to intimidate the media in a way that is more blatant than perhaps at any other time in Turkey’s disturbed history of press freedoms.

It’s important for Turkish authoritie­s to remember that by keeping tabs on public officials and security forces, reporters curb their worst excesses and tendencies towards corruption. Journalism is a crucial pillar of civil society, and not criminal activity.

Yours,

Borzou Daragahi

Internatio­nal correspond­ent

 ?? (Youtube) ?? The photograph­er covered the shooting of Kemal Kurkut in 2017
(Youtube) The photograph­er covered the shooting of Kemal Kurkut in 2017

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