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Turkey's human rights activity to be examined by UN |
26 Jan 2015: posted by the editor - Human Rights, Turkey | |
The United Nations Human Rights Council will begin reviewing Turkey’s respect for fundamental freedoms on Tuesday, 27 January. Reporters Without Borders, which has consultative status with the UN, provided the council with a written contribution on freedom of information in Turkey last July. The situation has continued to worsen since then. The Turkish authorities have steadily abandoned the undertakings they gave four years ago during the Universal Periodic Review’s first cycle. Established in 2008, the UPR is a mechanism by which the human rights performance of each of the UN’s 193 member states is reviewed every four years or so. The second cycle offers an opportunity to evaluate how each country has done since its first review. “Four years ago, the Turkish government said that continuing improvements in respect for media freedom were ‘one of the fundamental aspects’ of its human rights reforms,” said Johann Bihr, the head of the Reporters Without Borders Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk. “But progress in the past four years has in practice been very limited and the government has instead embarked on an increasingly authoritarian and repressive course. This second UPR should be used to remind the Turkish authorities of their past undertakings and to make them face up to their responsibilities.” The army’s self-appointed right to influence political developments has been rightly curtailed and a number of taboos linked to the Kemalist heritage have gone, but new taboos are emerging and the government is becoming more and more authoritarian. The legislative shackles inherited from the military era have been loosened only slightly, while new repressive measures keep on being adopted, facilitating cyber-censorship and generalized surveillance. Bans on any reference to certain subjects of public interest are becoming more and more frequent. Media pluralism is being undermined by growing self-censorship and the concentration of ownership in ever fewer hands. Hostages to the relentless power struggles between the government and its rivals, more and more journalists are being prosecuted or stripped of their accreditation, while the police continue to use violence against media personnel with complete impunity. Reporters Without Borders again calls on the Turkish authorities to:
Download the Reporters Without Borders contribution (June 2014) Tags: Turkey, fundamental freedoms |
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