Worries About Internet Censorship in Turkey

The Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) has reacted to the passing of a bill on 22 May which foresees criminal punishment for publishing remarks considered insulting to the memory of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

On 22 May, President Ahmet Sezer ratified a bill which allows authorities to block websites with content deemed to have insulted the memory of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish Republic.

RSF: Control is excessive

Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) has argued that "resorting to criminal penalties to punish Internet users is excessive. It shows the authorities want to force website editors to censor themselves. The possible consequences of this law are very disturbing. Will subversive content also be banned from chat forums? How far does the government want to go to impose its control on online dissent?"

Content of the law

Article 8 of Law 5651 on the "Prevention of crimes in the computer

domain" calls for content to be blocked if it violates a 1951 law on "crimes against Atatürk." The article says: "When there is sufficient evidence of the improper aspect of content (. . .) access must be blocked." As well as punishing "crimes against Atatürk," Law 5651 also punishes "inciting suicide" (article 84), "sexual abuse of children" (article 103), "prostitution" (article 227) and "inciting drug use" (article 190).

Service providers are held responsible

Internet Service Providers are themselves supposed to take the

initiative to block access to content, which they then show to a judge who decides whether or not the blocking should continue. It will be the job of a "Telecommunication Council" to identify those responsible for the content. A complaint will then be submitted to a "Communication Presidency," which, like the "Telecommunication Council" is an entity specially created to ensure the new law's implementation.

Access to YouTube has been blocked before

An Istanbul court ordered the national telecommunications company Turk Telecom to block the video-sharing site YouTube on 6 March because of content regarded as "insulting" to Atatürk. Access was restored two days later after YouTube removed the offending video. Reporters Without Borders put out a release at the time urging the judicial authorities to act with moderation. (IFEX/RSF/AG/EÜ)

* For further information, contact Julien Pain, RSF Internet Desk, 5, rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 71, fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51, e-mail: internet@rsf.org, Internet:

http://www.internet.rsf.org


Paris - BİA News Center

29 May 2007, Tuesday