“We demand freedom for all journalists. Freedom of expression and the press are core principles of democracy. We can no longer claim to be living in a democratic country unless these innocent journalists are set free.” The 17 employees have also effectively been punished without conviction, having already spent months in pre-trial detention.
The charges are based solely on journalists’ tweets and news reports, rather than any concrete evidence which has led press freedom supportive organisations to regard the prosecution as politically motivated. “It is unacceptable for us that our colleagues, who have no jobs other than journalistic activities, have been detained for months”, said Gökhan Durmuş chairman of TGS.
“On July 24, we expect the judges to release our colleagues and realise that journalistic activities are not a crime.” Since president Erdogan’s election to the presidency in 2014, the country has experienced a rapid descent towards authoritarianism, most noticeably after April’s constitutional referendum which among other amendments abolished the post of prime minister and replaced the parliamentary system with a presidential one, granting the executive much wider ranging powers. Last year’s failed coup saw president Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Democratic Party (AKP) begin a nationwide crackdown on dissent, including the dismissal of over 100,000 civil servants, the forced closure of hundreds of media outlets and civil society groups and the jailing of 165 journalists. Turkey is now the world’s leading jailor of journalists. “The EFJ and IFJ see these charges for what they are, blatant persecution of an independent and critical newspaper and its employees,” said IFJ President Philippe Leruth. “Cumhuriyet is one of the largest and oldest newspapers in Turkey with a long and distinguished history of editorial independence and advocacy for free expression. It is evident to us and the international community that the Turkish government is once again criminalizing journalistic work and attempting to silence one of the only remaining major opposition voices in the country. We demand the immediate release of the Cumhuriyet employees, as well as all other journalists jailed for exercising their right to free expression.”
For more information, please contact IFJ on + 32 2 235 22 16
The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 141 countries