The new Turkey |
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24-Jan-2019 14:01 |
Ece Sevim Öztürk, editor-in-chief of Çağdaş Ses news site, was arrested on June 20, 2018, over a documentary she filmed related to the July-15 coup attempt in 2016. Journalist is being charged with “making terrorist propaganda” and “aiding a terrorist organization” referring to the Gülen-linked movement (FETÖ) as the terrorist organization led by Pennsylvania-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who Turkey’s government accuses of having established a “parallel state structure” and who the government blames for being behind the coup attempt. The indictment, prepared only 2.5 months after Öztürk’s arrest, cited her documentary titled “Darkest day of the Navy: July 15” as criminal evidence, claiming the documentary was meant to “revive the organization and free its members jailed by creating a positive image of the Gülen movement and coup plotters”. Indictment also cited the documentary as a “so-called documentary which includes familiar fiction scenarios of coup attempt to be controlled [by the government] and demonstrates the ones who fought against the coup attempt as traitors.”* 11 December 2019_ Ece Sevim Öztürk given 3-year prison sentence
An Istanbul court on 11 December convicted journalist Ece Sevim Öztürk of “aiding a terrorist organization without being its member” at the end of what marked the second hearing in the trial into the jailed journalist. The 37th High Criminal Court of Istanbul sentenced Öztürk to 3 years, 1 month and 15 days in prison. The court also ruled for Öztürk’s release pending the appeal process but imposed on the journalist an international travel ban. Öztürk, the editor-in-chief of the news website Çağdaş Ses, had been in the Bakırköy Women’s Prison in Istanbul since June, when she was arrested and jailed pending trial as part of an investigation on the allegation that the journalist “shared posts supportive of ‘FETÖ’ on social media in the aftermath of the 15 July coup attempt.” Turkish authorities blame US-based cleric Fethullah Gülen and his network, now officially called FETÖ, for the failed coup attempt of 2016. Öztürk was brought to Tuesday’s hearing from the Bakırköy Prison. The hearing was closed to the public and the press at the request of the journalist’s family. At the end of the trial’s first hearing in November, the court had sent the case file to the prosecution for the drafting of their final opinion. During Tuesday’s hearing, Öztürk and her lawyers gave their defense statements in response to the final opinion of the prosecution, submitted with the panel in between court hearings. “I believe in justice. I request to be acquitted and released,” Öztürk told the court at the end of her closing statement. Issuing its verdict following a brief recess at the end of the hearing, the 37th High Criminal Court of Istanbul ordered that Öztürk be “immediately released in consideration of the time she spent in detention on remand, the sentence she was imposed, and the fact that detention on remand to be a preventive measure.” Öztürk will be subject to judicial control in the form of an international travel ban until the end of the appeal process. Öztürk’s lawyers said they will appeal the sentence. Source
Turkish court rules to continue pretrial detention of journalist Öztürk
Öztürk, the editor-in-chief of the Çağdaş Ses news website, was detained on June 8 and arrested on June 20 shortly after the release of a documentary she shot about a failed coup attempt in Turkey on July 15, 2016. Accused of aiding a terrorist organization and disseminating propaganda on behalf of a terrorist organization in six tweets she shared on Twitter and in a documentary titled “The Darkest Day of the Naval Forces: July 15,” Öztürk has appeared before a judge for the first time since she was arrested five months ago. The first hearing in the trial of Öztürk, who has also been accused of “aiming at creating chaos before the June 24 general election,“ was held at the İstanbul 37th High Criminal Court on Thursday. Reminding that she is an investigative journalist during her testimony before the court, Öztürk stated that she has been held in solitary confinement at the Bakırköy Prison for Women for five months only because of the news reports she wrote. Referring the spectators in the courtroom, Öztürk said: “I haven’t seen this many people in a long time. That’s why I’m a little confused.” “I am accused of inciting chaos before June 24 elections. However, I was looking into some aspects of the July 15 coup that had remained unclear for one-and-a-half years, and I was writing a book on it,” Öztürk said and and added: “I’m specifically accused of writing about the Marmaris case. I wrote that some evidence related to the assassination attempt against the president [Recep Tayyip Erdoğan] was brought before the court. In my news stories about the Marmaris case, I said there was another team in this assassination attempt against the president. My goal was not to discredit the court but to ask for the elimination of the shortcomings.” Öztürk recalled that a file that was closed in Dalaman case was reopened for five suspects after her news stories about the Marmaris case and said, “The press is the fourth estate, and my news stories have confirmed that.” Emphasizing that her tweets were within the scope of freedom of expression, Öztürk said: “I prepared the documentary film based on the navy case [related to July 15 coup bid] and its supplementary dossier. The documents are real and official. Is writing news reports and producing a documentary based on official documents a crime?” “Moreover, when I started preparing these news stories and the documentary, (Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet] Bahçeli had not even called for an early general election. How could I have incited chaos before the election?” “I was tried in numerous cases against me, and I was acquitted in all of them. It is illogical to blame a journalist for doing her job with honor and pride. I have not committed any crime attributed to me, but I admit to having written all the news stories and tweets. None of them was criminal.” Öztürk’s lawyer, Efkan Bolaç, condemned the trial as shameful and said: “My client’s only mistake was being curious. Punishment for that is not correct. The judiciary in Turkey is reluctant to enforce the law. In the indictment there is no crime, but they tell Öztürk to prove her innocence.” Bolaç requested that the court acquit Öztürk and to release her from prison. However, the prosecutor demanded the continuation of her pretrial imprisonment, claiming that there is a strong suspicion of a crime having been committed and the belief that she poses a flight risk. The court ruled to keep Öztürk in jail and set the next hearing for Dec. 11. The prosecutor had alleged in his indictment that Öztürk attempted to cast doubt on the legitimacy of the general and presidential elections held in Turkey on June 24 before and after the elections, tried to create social chaos in a bid to reinvigorate the Gülen movement and made efforts to save its jailed members from prison. The indictment claimed that under the pretext of journalism, Öztürk posted messages on social media about the coup attempt and the coup trials to create a public perception in favor of the coup plotters. Öztürk’s reporting on the coup attracted much attention on social media and was quoted by several news outlets in Turkey. Source
20 June 2018: 21 June 2018 - Investigative journalist Öztürk arrested by Istanbul court
![]() An Istanbul court on Wednesday arrested Ece Sevim Öztürk, a journalist known for her investigative reporting on a coup attempt in Turkey on July 15, 2016, the Hürriyet daily reported. Öztürk, who was referred to court after 13 days’ detention, was arrested for “aiding the Gülen movement.” Also the editor-in-chief of the Çağdaşses news website, Öztürk was detained by İstanbul police on June 8 on allegations of spreading “terrorist propaganda,” a reference to her recent reporting, including a documentary on the coup. According to state of emergency measures, police can keep a “terror suspect” in custody for seven days, which was reduced from the previous 30 days by a government decree in 2017. Source
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