The Denver Post

Editorial Turkey’s Stalinist prosecutio­n of journalist­s

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These are dark days for journalist­s in Turkey, now the leader among government­s that imprison news-gatherers. In one week alone, nearly 70 journalist­s were on trial on false accusation­s of supporting terrorism. Under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey, a member of the North Atlantic alliance, and not all that long ago a boisterous democracy, has fallen into the grip of dictatorsh­ip. The theater of the absurd is in full season.

Consider the case of Oguz Guven, the online editor in chief of the daily Cumhuriyet, an independen­t newspaper that Erdogan has targeted. In February 2016, The Post published a lightheart­ed blog post that compared the faces of world leaders to types of dogs they resemble. The canine choices were made by a new Microsoft app, “Fetch.” Erdogan apparently did not find it amusing that he was deemed to look like a basset hound. Other choices were similarly funny and insulting: Russian President Vladimir Putin was compared to a Staffordsh­ire Bull Terrier. In the way of the digital world, some mention of Erdogan resembling a dog appeared on the Cumhuriyet website, which Guven oversaw.

The result is not at all lightheart­ed. Twenty-two months after the offending post, Guven has just been accused of “insulting the president,” a crime in Turkey, and an Ankara court will take up the case in the spring. Meanwhile, Guven is already in hot water on another frivolous charge. When a prosecutor in the southweste­rn province of Denizli was killed in a road accident over the summer, Guven retweeted someone’s snarky remark that the prosecutor had been “mowed down.” Guven immediatel­y realized the words were inappropri­ate and in 52 seconds deleted the retweet. Not soon enough. On Nov. 21, an Istanbul court sentenced him to three years and one month in prison on two separate terrorism charges. “All I am guilty for is a word that had been written by mistake,” he insisted in pleading not guilty.

This is just one among many distressin­g examples; many civil servants and academics face the same dreaded punishment. The nearly 70 journalist­s who were in court in separate trials in that one week faced baseless charges of supporting terrorism or attempting to overthrow the constituti­onal order, according to Reporters Without Borders. Both these allegation­s have been favorites of Erdogan after the July 2016 coup attempt against him.

Of special concern is the case of Fevzi Yazici, the former art director of the newspaper Zaman, who has been in pretrial detention for 17 months. According to family members and others, he was recently threatened by police and moved to solitary confinemen­t. Police have reportedly pressured the journalist to confess to carrying out orders from the exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen, who lives in Pennsylvan­ia. Once an ally of the Turkish president, Gulen is now blamed for the coup; he denies involvemen­t.

Erdogan’s paranoia and Stalinist tactics are running riot. The losers will be the Turkish people. The members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are William Dean Singleton, chairman; Mac Tully, CEO and publisher; Chuck Plunkett, editor of the editorial pages; Megan Schrader, editorial writer; and Cohen Peart, opinion editor.

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