The search lasted from 1 am to 4.30 am, involving over 200 police officers on the premises of Stêrk TV and Medya Haber in Denderleeuw city. As the images show, several doors were forced open and their handles removed. In some rooms, false ceilings were also smashed and large LED screens were damaged. The Public Prosecutor’s Office also seized two computers which, in addition to accounting and banking operations, were mainly used for journalistic work, putting the confidentiality of journalistic sources at risk.
According to the Federal Public Prosecutor, the search was conducted at the request of the French national PNAT anti-terrorist prosecutor’s office. As part of an investigation into the financing of the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK), the French authorities suspect the television channels to be connected with the PKK. The party, on the terror list of the European Union, is no longer considered a terrorist organisation in Belgium.
“We make no comment about whether this raid was necessary – that is not our concern. The force used, however, was wholly disproportionate, and unnecessary, and caused considerable damage. We hope that all the usual guarantees in respect of press freedom have been observed, and will continue to monitor the situation closely?" stated VVJ General Secretary Charlotte Michils, after witnessing the damage on site.
“The IFJ-EFJ join the Flemish Association of Journalists in calling on the Belgian Federal Police for clarification: “The confidentiality of journalistic sources equally applies to the Kurdish TV channels based in Belgium. Any breach must be proportionate and treated with the utmost caution,” added EFJ General Secretary Ricardo Gutiérrez.
This is not the first time that Kurdish TV channels in Denderleeuw have been the target of these massive police raids. There have been two similar police crackdowns in the past, in 1996 and 2010. None of the searches resulted in follow-up action.
The same night, Turkish police detained nine journalists working for pro-Kurdish media outlets in Istanbul, Ankara, and Urfa in raids on suspicion of terrorist activities. According to the Agence France Presse (AFP), the raids in Belgium had “no link” to the arrests in Turkey.