Saturday, May 26, 2007

Press and Pressure

After this weeks suicide bomb in Ankara the Police are to be given 'terror authorisation'
Hürriyet reports the draft bill proposes:
- Authorisation of use of all types of human and technical resources and intelligence activities, including the use of cameras, voice recording facilities and the internet, to survey possible criminals. It was explained that this could also mean the ability to listen to telephone conversations without obtaining any prior permission.

- The police will be able to obtain fingerprints from anybody applying for a gun license, driving license or passport.

- The police will be able to carry out body searches and searches of cars, personal documents and personal effects after obtaining authority from the civil authorities.

Then from the UK...
The home secretary, John Reid, made clear yesterday he is prepared to declare a "state of emergency" to suspend key parts of the human rights convention if the law lords do not overturn a series of judgments that have weakened the anti-terrorist control order regime...... MPs fear the control order regime is in danger of becoming a public laughing stock since six of the current 17 terror suspects subject to orders have managed to disappear.
In the Guardian this week Press Repression in Russia and Turkey Growing

Yavuz Baydar, the ombudsman for the Sabah newspaper, spoke of a similar pattern of fear and self-censorship in Turkey following the murder of Hrant Dink in January this year.

Investigative reporting was disappearing. There was a sense of fatigue among editors. As many as 15 of Baydar's colleagues now had round-the-clock bodyguards: some had armoured cars and feared for their relatives.

Journalists, intellectuals and writers had become used to being jailed in Turkey, said Baydar. However, the murder of a leading commentator such as Dink was different: it was intended to unleash instability, polarise society and legitimise hatred.

Baydar said he could not pretend that the murder of Dink had resulted in solidarity among journalists. There had been a march of 100,000 mourners protesting at Dink's murder - but he had seen only one rival editor at the funeral, and no rival publishers or proprietors.

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