Friday, June 30, 2006

Turkey demands 10 years prison to 56 kurdish mayors

Friday June 16th 2006, 11:50 am
Filed under: Journalism , Online news

Dozens of mayors from Turkey's troubled southeast could go to jail for sending a letter to Denmark's prime minister, who said that would go against the values of the EU which Turkey is hoping to join. A state prosecutor has charged 56 mayors with "knowingly and willingly helping" the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) when they urged Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen not to close the Danish-based Kurdish broadcaster Roj TV.

No date has been set for the trial and the criminal court must still accept the charges for the case to go ahead. The mayors could face up to 10 years in jail. Turkey accuses Roj of being a mouthpiece of the separatist PKK, which took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984 with the aim of carving out an ethnic homeland. More than 30,000 people, mostly Kurds, have been killed in that conflict.

Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen today told the Danish Broadcasting Corporation that he was "shocked about the charges"

ROJ TV

In support of ROJ TV, I have decided to add the stream to Newspaper Index TV. This means that you can now watch ROJ TV directly from you browser. Click here to watch ROJ TV at http://www.orj.tv

Outspoken Kurd Is Living on the Edge in Turkey




By Tracy Wilkinson, Times Staff Writer
May 30, 2006

BATMAN, Turkey — Huseyin Kalkan, the mayor of Batman, pointed to the bullet holes in the pale-yellow wall of his office, little indentations just above the framed photograph of a lavender cactus blossom.

"I'm always a target, especially when something goes wrong," Kalkan said.

Undoubtedly, Kalkan has many enemies, and these days, things are certainly going wrong.

The outspoken mayor of this oil town deep in southeastern Turkey is one of more than 50 Kurds elected to top municipal offices during a period of political and cultural opening in the restive region.

Now, however, he has become a lightning rod in a conflict that is threatening to take Turkey's Kurds back to dark, violent days of separatist terrorism and military repression.

Kalkan, 42, is seen by many Kurds as a champion of their rights, and by many Turks as a dangerous provocateur. That is precisely the kind of precarious position in which Kurdish politicians in this region frequently find themselves.

Unabashedly sympathetic to Kurdish nationalists, he has been shot at — by Turkish police, he contends — and faces a dozen criminal complaints filed by Turkish state prosecutors.

Among the charges pending against him are association with and support for a terrorist group, namely the Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, the guerrillas that since 1984 have fought for independence from Turkey. The PKK, which declared a cease-fire in 1999 but resumed attacks in 2004, is regarded as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Kalkan, a wiry man with thick salt-and-pepper hair and mustache who speaks heavily accented Turkish, could face an 18-year prison sentence if he is found guilty.

Most recently, he was called in for questioning by state prosecutors after signing a petition with other Kurdish mayors in support of a Kurdish television channel that broadcasts from Denmark. Roj TV can be viewed by Kurds in Turkey with satellite dishes, and it is wildly popular.

The Turkish government, however, sees the channel as a mouthpiece for terrorists and has been lobbying the Danes to shut it down. Turkey has accused Roj TV of inciting violence during a recent wave of deadly protests in predominantly Kurdish cities and points to the channel's frequent airing of interviews with PKK rebels as evidence of its complicity with the outlawed group. Roj TV describes itself as independent and said it is merely covering the news.

Kalkan and 55 other mayors with the Democratic Society Party, the largest Kurdish political faction in Turkey , wrote to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen that closing Roj TV would harm "our efforts to build a pluralistic and democratic society in Turkey."

The mayors argued that Roj TV filled a void. Only recently have Turkish authorities, in their push to join the European Union, allowed limited Kurdish-language broadcasting on state or private TV; such broadcasts remain censored and restricted to a few hours a week.

A father of six and the son of a shoeshine man, Kalkan did a two-year stint in jail when he was 18, accused of aiding and abetting a terrorist group. He was eventually acquitted, he said. He was raised in Batman and went to high school with quite a few young men who went "to the mountains" to fight for the PKK.

Although Kalkan could be described as overly uncritical of the PKK, and doesn't hold the group responsible for violence, he does advocate a peaceful solution to Turkish-Kurdish differences. The era of armed struggle is over, he said.

He and his party have drafted a 20-point plan, with some demands that sound plausible, such as greater cultural rights and election rules that would make it easier for Kurdish parties to enter the national parliament.

There are other stipulations the Turkish government would find intolerable, such as an amnesty for PKK fighters and freedom for PKK commander Abdullah Ocalan, who was captured and jailed in 1999.

Kalkan acknowledges that there has been progress but warns of more bloodshed, greater agitation for independence and a new crop of PKK recruits if the government does not entertain additional Kurdish demands.

"Most Kurds are looking to Turkey and Europe," he said. "But if the status quo persists, they will start looking more and more to northern Iraq and will want to separate and unite with the Kurds of northern Iraq."

For Turkish leaders, that is a nightmare scenario. Fears of such separatism are the motive behind generations of government repression of Kurdish cultural identity.

As for his own troubles, Kalkan said they come in waves.

"When there is conflict and violence, the pressure mounts," he said. "From 1999 to 2005, we didn't have too many problems. Only in the last year and a half have we had trouble.

"The tension is growing once again."

56 Turkish Mayors May Face 10-Year Imprisonment for Support of Kurd TV

Wednesday, June 21, 2006
So called Turkey!

56 Turkish Mayors May Face 10-Year Imprisonment for Support of Kurd TV
6/20/2006 Pan Armenian.net

Turkey's Office of Prosecutor General has sent prosecution materials for mayors of 56 towns in the south-east of the country, which support a Kurdish TV channel. Heads of those towns, where Kurdish population forms a majority, have sent a letter to Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen asking not to closeRoj TV, broadcasting for Kurds. They asked not to give in to Turkish Government's pressure.

Turkish authorities consider that town mayors, who signed the letter to Rasmussen, thus assisted Kurd rebels, specifically the Kurdish Working Party, banned in the country. In the opinion of Turkish officials, Roj TV is engaged in propagating that Party. In case the court announces mayors of Turkish towns are guilty, they may face 10 years of imprisonment.

At a meeting with representatives of EU member states Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen noted that prosecution of mayors for that letter runs counter to values of the united Europe, Times Online reports.

http://hiwakan.blogspot.com

Turkish mayors may face jail for letters sent to Danish PM


Published: 06/16/2006 12:00 AM (UAE)

Reuters

Diyarbakir: Dozens of mayors from Turkey's troubled southeast could face up to 10 years in jail for sending a letter to Denmark's prime minister, a court indictment showed yesterday.

A state prosecutor has charged 56 mayors with "knowingly and willingly helping" the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) when they urged Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen not to close the Danish-based Kurdish broadcaster Roj TV.

No date has been set for the trial and the criminal court must still accept the charges for the case to go ahead.

Last week a mayor from the southeast was sentenced to 15 months in jail for comments broadcast on Roj TV.

Turkey accuses Roj of being a mouthpiece of the separatist PKK, which took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984 with the aim of carving out an ethnic homeland. More than 30,000 people, mostly Kurds, have been killed in that conflict.

Ankara is also under pressure from the European Union, which it hopes to join, to improve the cultural rights of its ethnic minorities, especially the 12 million Kurds who until the 1990s were banned from even using their language in public.

In the letter sent to Rasmussen last December, the mayors of some of the largest cities in the southeast urged him to resist any pressure from Ankara to close down Roj TV, which they said was necessary for democracy in Turkey.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Limits on Kurdish movies and music lifted


Tuesday, June13,2006


ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

The Supreme Board of Radio and Television (RTÜK) has lifted a limit of 45 minutes daily and four hours per week imposed on Kurdish broadcasts of cultural shows.

According to the decision those television stations that have permission to broadcast in Kurdish can run movies and concerts beyond the time allocated, but the limitation still stands for news programs and discussion shows. The decision was taken unanimously by the RTÜK board.

While television and radio channels will not be bound by time limitations when it comes to concerts and movies, they will still have to use subtitles for all programs.

The RTÜK decision does not allow these stations to broadcast 24 hours a day. Licenses to broadcast only movies or music are not available, and the license provided does not allow continuous broadcasting in Kurdish.

The owners of television stations that broadcast in Kurdish had complained that they were finding it difficult to fill 45 minutes a day with only news but noted that if they wanted to broadcast movies or concerts, the allotted time was not sufficient.


Broadcasts finally began on March 23.

Two private regional television channels and a radio station started brief Kurdish-language broadcasts for the first time in Turkey on March 23 of this year.

Executives from Gün TV, Söz TV and Medya FM, all based in the Southeast, signed a deal with Turkey's broadcasting watchdog. The existing laws limit the broadcasts to 45 minutes a day and four hours per week for television stations and one hour a day and five hours per week for radio stations. They also require broadcasters to run subtitles in Turkish, which some criticize as causing too many technical difficulties.

Under pressure to comply with European Union democracy norms, Turkey began Kurdish-language broadcasts on state television in 2004, a taboo-breaking move in a country where even speaking Kurdish was banned less than 15 years ago.

As part of EU-oriented reforms, Parliament in 2002 also granted limited rights for Kurdish to be taught at private language institutions. Although Kurds at first welcomed the schools, they have since closed because of dwindling interest and Kurdish demands that the language be part of the regular school curriculum. Turkish nationalists are opposed to increased cultural rights for the country's estimated 12 million Kurds, fearing that it would embolden separatists. Turkish soldiers have battled Kurdish militants in the Southeast since 1984, a conflict that has left 37,000 dead. There has been a recent surge in violence.

Roj TV: Many Kurds watch the Denmark-based Kurdish satellite television Roj TV. The Turkish government is pressuring Copenhagen to close down the station, saying it is a mouthpiece for the outlawed Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK), which Turkey , the United States and the EU consider to be a terrorist group. Turkey's previous failure to allow television stations to broadcast in Kurdish had resulted in no alternative to Roj TV in the Southeast.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

56 Kurdish mayors charged in TV dispute Face prison term


TORONTO STAR

Sat.Jun.24,2006

Face prison term for backing satellite channel

Turkey says Danish station linked to militants

Jun. 24, 2006 . 01:00 AM

YIGAL SCHLEIFER

SPECIAL TO THE STAR



DIYARBAKIR, Turkey—Fifty-six mayors from Turkey's predominantly Kurdish southeast region have been charged with aiding militants of the Kurdistan Workers' Party — after publicly supporting a TV channel beamed by satellite from Denmark.

The mayors face up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Since it started broadcasting in 2004, Roj TV has become one of the most widely watched television networks in Turkey's Kurdish regions.

In January, the mayors wrote an open letter to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, asking him to resist Turkish pressure to shut down the satellite news and entertainment service.

The government in Ankara, however, accuses Roj TV of being a mouthpiece for the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which battled Turkish troops during the 1980s and '90s in a bloody separatist fight that killed more than 30,000 people.

"It is clear that (the mayors) helped the PKK knowingly and willingly," the indictment says.

The Kurds, however, see Roj TV as a cultural lifeline.

In her small apartment in Diyarbakir, an ancient city ringed by a stone wall dating back to Roman times, Rabia Celikmilek has access to the entire world. A satellite dish on the roof of her crumbling brick building streams 452 channels into her television, with programs coming from countries on almost every continent. But Celikmilek, a Kurd, says she really only watches Roj TV.

"I don't know Turkish and I don't want to watch Turkish programs. I want to watch programs in my own language, so I watch Roj," the 46-year-old mother of 10 says, as she watches the station's evening news broadcast.

"Roj TV reflects the emotions of the Kurds, our opinions. It's a mirror of the Kurds. So when I watch it, I am happy."

With PKK guerrillas again clashing with Turkish security forces, following several years of quiet, and tensions on the rise in the southeast, the Turkish government has been stepping up a campaign to have Roj TV shut down — a move that threatens to strain the normally staid relations with Denmark and which has raised hackles among Kurds.

"We know for sure that Roj TV is part of the PKK, a terrorist organization," a Turkish foreign ministry official says. The PKK "is listed as a terrorist organization by the EU, and Denmark is a member of the EU and we would expect that the broadcasting organization of a terrorist group would not be given a free pass."

Turkey has accused Roj of helping incite a three-day outbreak of violent protests in the southeast in March and says it has provided the Danish government with documentation to prove the station's link to the PKK.

Denmark , meanwhile, finds itself wrapped up in yet another sticky freedom of the press debate. Although nothing compared to the furor over the printing of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad by a Danish newspaper, Denmark's embassy in Ankara has been receiving a steady stream of angry letters and emails from Turks incensed by the country's hosting of Roj TV.

The issue even sparked a mini-diplomatic crisis in Copenhagen last November when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan boycotted a joint press conference with his Danish counterpart because a reporter from Roj was in the room. Rasmussen ended up awkwardly appearing before the cameras on his own.

"Surely, it's not something that helps to improve relations," Anders Christian Hoppe, Denmark's ambassador to Turkey, says of the Roj TV affair.

"The (Danish) government's position is that, just like in Turkey, this is a matter for the courts."

In response to the mayors' upcoming trial, Rasmussen told reporters: "I find it rather shocking ... that because you write a letter to me, you are being accused of violating the law. It is shocking that it can take place in a country which is seeking EU membership."

Roj, which means both "day" and "sun" in Kurdish, certainly has open access to the PKK, whose fighters and leadership are holed up in the mountains of northern Iraq.

The station frequently airs footage provided by the group of its guerrillas in action against Turkish security forces. During a recent interview in Diyarbakir, the mother of a slain PKK guerrilla was asked how she learned about her son's death. "On Roj TV," she said, as if the answer should have been obvious.

But Manouchehr Tahsili Zonoozi, a Kurd from Iran who is the station's general manager, says that it is not controlled by it.

"We are an independent Kurdish broadcaster. Our job is to be journalists," he says in a telephone interview from the station's studios in Denmark.

Yigal Schleifer is a journalist based in Turkey

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Turk Court to Try 56 Mayors Over Letter to Danish PM


Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Reuters

DIYARBAKIR, Turkey, 20 June 2006 — A court agreed yesterday to try dozens of mayors in Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast over a letter they sent to Denmark's prime minister, in a case that could harm Ankara's ties with the European Union. The court accepted a state prosecutor's charge that the 56 mayors had "knowingly and willingly" helped Kurdish rebels when they urged Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen not to close the Danish-based Kurdish broadcaster Roj TV.
If convicted, the mayors face up to 10 years in jail. They include Osman Baydemir, mayor of Diyarbakir, the largest city of the impoverished region, and a senior official in the Democratic Society Party which champions Kurdish rights. The trial will begin after all the defendants have been notified of the charges, officials said.
Turkey accuses Roj of being a mouthpiece of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984 with the aim of carving out an ethnic homeland in the southeast. More than 30,000 people have been killed in that conflict.
But, speaking during an EU summit in Brussels last week, Rasmussen said putting the mayors on trial over the letter would contravene the values of the EU, which Turkey hopes to join. Ankara began EU membership talks last October.
"(Such a trial) is not something we (the EU) will quietly accept because it would be completely contradictory to the principle that has to be met for countries wishing to join the EU," Rasmussen said.
Turkey has eased tough restrictions on the Kurdish language and culture in recent years as part of its drive to join the EU, though the European Commission says it must do more. Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan boycotted a news conference last November in Denmark with Rasmussen to protest against the presence of a journalist from Roj TV.

posted in : http://eastkurd.blogspost.com

IHD Chair Faces 4.5 Years Jail for "Speech"

Trial of IHD Diyarbakir Branch Chair Demirtas for speech on Roj TV begins with prosecutor demanding 4.5 years imprisonment on charge of "propagating for organization". IHD Diyarbakir: "The case is an obstacle to freedom of expression, repression of IHD."

BIA News Center
23/06/2006 BİA (Diyarbakir) - Human Rights Association (IHD) Diyarbakir Branch Chair Selahattin Demirtas appeared at court this week charged with carrying out "propaganda for an outlawed organization" in remarks he made on a program aired by the pro-Kurdish Roj TV.

On June 21, Wednesday, the prosecutor at the 5th High Criminal Court of Diyarbakir demanded from 1.5 to 4.5 years imprisonment for Demirtas under article 220 of the new Penal Code and for him to be banned from public rights and association leadership.

The hearing was adjourned to September 19, 2006, for Demirtas to be given time to prepare his defence.

IHD: Most violations are of our rights

The IHD Diyarbakir Branch said the case was a form of repression of the association and forces of democracy while it was a serious obstacle in front of the freedom of expression.

"Our branch chairman said that [imprisoned PKK leader] Abdullah Ocalan's statement were still being paid heed to by KONGRA-GEL and the Kurds, and that because of this Ocalan could play an important role in ending the clashes and creating a final and lasting peace, but that could only be achieved with him being allowed to meet with his attorneys and family, that the isolation on Ocalan should be lifted."

IHD Branch secretary Ali Akinci told bianet that more than 70 investigations and cases had so far been launched against Demirtas and stressed that the Human Rights Association which fought for human rights was an association whose rights were most violated.

Mayors face ROJ-TV jail too

The case against Demirtas for his speech on Roj-TV comes in the wake of an indictment filed against 56 mayors of the Democratic Society Party (DTP) on charges of assisting the PKK through their actions.

The 56 mayors face up to 10 years imprisonment each if found guilty for a letter they sent collectively to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen where they requested that country not to yield to Turkish pressure and close down Roj-TV.

The indictment prepared by the Diyarbakir Public Prosecutor's Office claimed Roj-TV carried out organizational propaganda and that the December 21, 2005, dated letter of the mayors was a violation of the law serving the interests of an outlawed organization.

In their letter to Rasmussen the mayors said ''the voice of ROJ TV should not be silenced for a real democracy in Turkey. This is the common and sincere request of our people, whom we represent at the level of local government. The abolition of this voice will mean the lost of basic freedoms for democracy, human rights and the struggle for a democratic society''.

Pro-Kurdish activists claim that in addition to the mayors' letter more than 7,000 letters have been sent out by ROJ-TV supporters to Danish authorities asking for them to allow the station to stay open. (TK/II/YE)

Deborah Ann Dilley in her weekly column Kurdistance

Wednesday,June21at,2006@9:33EDT

Kurdistance :

You may or may not remember some of the fine work that Save Roj TV has done in the past, they have been continuing their coverage of their saga to stay operating in face of opposition from the Turkish government . The newest escalation is that Kurdish mayors have not only been questioned by the authorities for talking to RojTV , but some of them have been indicted on charges of aiding Kurdish rebels .

56 Turkish Mayors May Face 10-Year Imprisonment for Support of Kurd TV


21.06.2006 12:12

YEREVAN (YERKIR) - Turkey's Office of Prosecutor General has sent prosecution materials for mayors of 56 towns in the south-east of the country, which support a Kurdish TV channel.

Heads of those towns, where Kurdish population forms a majority, have sent a letter to Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen asking not to closeRoj TV, broadcasting for Kurds. They asked not to give in to Turkish Government's pressure.

Turkish authorities consider that town mayors, who signed the letter to Rasmussen, thus assisted Kurd rebels, specifically the Kurdish Working Party, banned in the country. In the opinion of Turkish officials, Roj TV is engaged in propagating that Party.

In case the court announces mayors of Turkish towns are guilty, they may face 10 years of imprisonment. At a meeting with representatives of EU member states Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen noted that prosecution of mayors for that letter runs counter to values of the united Europe, Times Online reports.

Armenia Now

NEWS DIGEST

23.06.2006

Turkey's Office of Prosecutor General has sent prosecution materials for mayors of 56 towns in the south-east of the country, which support a Kurdish TV channel. Heads of those towns, where Kurdish population forms a majority, have sent a letter to Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen asking not to close Roj TV, broadcasting for Kurds. They asked not to give in to Turkish Government's pressure. Turkish authorities consider that town mayors, who signed the letter to Rasmussen, thus assisted Kurd rebels, specifically the Kurdish Working Party, banned in the country. In the opinion of Turkish officials, the Roj TV is engaged in propagating that Party. In case the court announces mayors of Turkish towns are guilty, they may face 10 years of imprisonment, Times Online reports.

Friday, June 23, 2006

56 Turkish Mayors May Face 10-Year Imprisonment for Support of Kurd TV



20.06.2006 17:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey's Office of Prosecutor General has sent prosecution materials for mayors of 56 towns in the south-east of the country, which support a Kurdish TV channel. Heads of those towns, where Kurdish population forms a majority, have sent a letter to Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen asking not to close Roj TV, broadcasting for Kurds. They asked not to give in to Turkish Government's pressure.

Turkish authorities consider that town mayors, who signed the letter to Rasmussen, thus assisted Kurd rebels, specifically the Kurdish Working Party, banned in the country. In the opinion of Turkish officials, Roj TV is engaged in propagating that Party. In case the court announces mayors of Turkish towns are guilty, they may face 10 years of imprisonment. At a meeting with representatives of EU member states Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen noted that prosecution of mayors for that letter runs counter to values of the united Europe, Times Online reports.

Prosecutor Demands 15 Years in Prison for 56 DTP Mayors

Turkish Daily News

Thursday,June 22 , 2006

ANKARA - TDN with AP

A Turkish prosecutor has demanded 15 years in prison for 56 pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) mayors who wrote to Denmark's prime minister urging him to resist Turkish calls to ban an allegedly pro-Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) television station, the Anatolia news agency reported on Tuesday.

The mayors were expected to stand trial soon in Diyarbakır , where the PKK has been fighting for autonomy for more than two decades. No trial date has been set.

The trial of the mayors is likely to further strain Turkey 's ties with the European Union, which has been pressuring the EU-candidate country to expand freedom of speech and improve treatment of its Kurdish citizens. Ankara does not recognize the Kurds as an official minority and has ruled out any dialogue with the PKK.

The mayors were charged after they sent a letter to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, asking him to keep the Roj TV station on the air in Denmark despite claims from Turkey that it was a mouthpiece for the PKK, the agency said.

The indictment accused the mayors of aiding and abetting a terrorist organization. The PKK has been listed by the European Union and the United States as a terror group.

Fogh Rasmussen strongly criticized the Turkish move last week.

"I find it rather shocking ... that because you write a letter to me, you are being accused of violating the law," Fogh Rasmussen told Danish public radio. "It is shocking that it can take place in a country which is seeking EU membership."

Last year, the Turkish Embassy in Copenhagen demanded that Denmark revoke the station's broadcasting license. The Danish government has refused to do so, citing freedom of speech.

However, Danish police have been investigating whether Roj TV has any ties with the PKK, something the station has repeatedly denied. It was unclear when the probe would end.

Danish-Turkish relations have long been strained over Kurdish groups based in Denmark.

In 1995, a political arm of the PKK opened its fourth European office in Copenhagen , sparking protests from the Turkish Embassy. The office later closed because of a lack of funding. In 2000, Turkey protested that a Kurdish-language satellite TV station, Mesopotamia TV, was allowed to broadcast from Denmark to Europe , the Middle East and northern Africa.

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Seen but not Kurd


20|06|06

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (left) in conversation with European Commission President José Manuel Barroso


Photo © European Commission

More than 50 mayors in the Kurdish southeast of Turkey could be sent to jail over a letter that they sent to the Danish Prime Minister.

A Turkish court accepted the state prosecutor's charge that the mayors had "knowingly and willingly" aided Kurdish rebels by calling on Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen not to close Roj TV, a Kurdish channel based in Denmark.

Turkey accuses Roj TV of being a mouthpiece of the banned Kurdish Workers' Party, which is seeking to create an ethnic homeland in Kurdish regions. If convicted, the mayors face up to ten years in jail.

The case could even jeopardise Turkey 's campaign to join the EU. In comments made at an EU summit in Brussels last week, Mr Rasmussen said that trying the mayors over the letter would contravene European values.

"Such a trial is not something we will quietly accept because it would be completely contradictory to the principle that has to be met for countries wishing to join the EU," the Danish Prime Minister said.

In recent years, Turkey has eased restrictions on Kurdish language and culture, as part of its drive to join the EU, although the European Commission says it must do more.

56 mayors face trial over a letter

The Times June 20, 2006

56 mayors face trial over a letter
By a Correspondent
A Turkish court intends to try dozens of mayors in the predominantly Kurdish southeast over a letter that they sent to the Danish Prime Minister, in a case that could harm Ankara's campaign to join the EU.

The court accepted a state prosecutor's charge that the 56 mayors had "knowingly and willingly" helped Kurdish rebels when they urged Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the Danish leader, not to close Roj TV, a Danish-based Kurdish broadcaster. If convicted, the mayors face up to ten years in jail. Turkey accuses Roj TV of being a mouthpiece of the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK), which seeks to create an ethnic homeland.

Mr Rasmussen said at an EU summit in Brussels last week that trying the mayors over the letter would contravene the values of the EU. (Reuters)

Turks target mayors for TV plea





Wed 21 Jun 2006

MARGARET NEIGHBOUR

A TURKISH prosecutor has demanded 15 years' imprisonment for 56 Kurdish mayors who wrote to Denmark's prime minister urging him to resist Turkish calls to ban an allegedly pro-rebel Kurdish television station.

The mayors are expected to stand trial soon in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's Kurdish-dominated south-east, where Kurdish guerrillas have been fighting for autonomy for more than two decades.

The trial is likely to further strain Turkey's ties with the European Union, which has been pressuring the EU-candidate country to expand freedom of speech and improve treatment of its Kurdish minority.

Ankara does not recognise the Kurds as an official minority and has ruled out any dialogue with the guerrillas.

The mayors were charged after they wrote to Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the Danish prime minister, asking him to keep the Roj TV station on the air in Denmark despite claims from Turkey that it was a mouthpiece for the guerrilla group, the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

The indictment accused the mayors of aiding and abetting a terrorist organisation. The PKK has been listed by both the EU and the US as a terrorist group.

Mr Fogh Rasmussen said: "I find it rather shocking ... that because you write a letter to me, you are being accused of violating the law. It is shocking that it can take place in a country which is seeking EU membership."

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

A kind message from Kaspar Agger

I just wish to express my great sympathy for the good work you are doing!!!

lets keep the struggle for minorities, peace and freedom for all - also the kurds!

keep up the good work, all the best and great appreciations,

kasper Agger

Student of International development and geography, currently working in northern Uganda, but have always followed the struggles by the kurds closely...

EU leaders urge Turkey to step up reforms

The Financial Times

By Daniel Dombey, George Parker and Tobias Buck in Brussels

Published: June 17 2006 03:00 | Last updated: June 17 2006 03:00

Europe's leaders yesterday delivered a stark warning to Turkey to step up its reforms, but decided not to set a tough new condition for EU enlargement.

Meeting in Brussels, the EU's leaders called on Turkey "to intensify the reform process and to implement it fully and effectively" and reminded Ankara that its actions would be scrutinised later this year.

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However, they rejected an Austrian proposal to classify the EU's ability to absorb new members - and public perceptions of the process - as a formal "criterion" for enlargement.

The European Commission will still prepare a report on the constraints of the EU's "absorption capacity" this autumn, in the run-up to a summit focusing on enlargement in December.

At the same time, the Commission will assess Turkey's reform record as well as its progress towardsmeeting an EU deadline to open its ports and airports to traffic from Cyprus this year.

In a speech yesterday, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish prime minister, said he would not make such a move unless a ban on trade between the EU and the Turkish Cypriot community on the north of the island was lifted. "We will never take a step backwards, not in the ports or the airports, without the isolation being lifted," he said.

An EU paper this week said Turkey had made inadequate progress in guaranteeing freedom of expression and religion, and had not put a sufficient check on the political activities of the military.

EU leaders also expressed concern about a criminal investigation of 56 Kurdish mayors in Turkey's south-east for writing a letter that urged Denmark to allow a Kurdish television station based in the country to remain open. Turkey accuses the channel, Roj TV, of being a mouthpiece for the PKK, the militant Kurdish group the EU officially classifies as a terrorist organisation.

Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Danish prime minister, described the investigation as "shocking . . . in a country which is seeking EU membership".

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, defended the new emphasis on the union's absorption capacity - though she acknowledged that governments were divided.

"There is a debate," she said. "There are countries such as France, Germany and Austria, for whom this absorption capacity is very important. And there are countries that tend to be more supportive of enlargement who sense this is an additional hurdle."

José Manuel Barroso, Commission president, said it was important for the EU to consider its ability to take in new members, butthat "absorption capacity" should not become another hurdle for applicant countries.

"This is not a new criterion - I repeat, not a new criterion - for new candidate countries," he said.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2006

Indictment against Turkish Mayors

By Athina Saloustrou
Reuters
15 Jun 2006


Dozens of mayors from SE Turkish towns are running the risk of getting a 10-year sentence for sending letters to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, an indictment released on Thursday read. The 56 mayors are accused of "knowingly and willingly helping the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)," when they called on him to bear up under pressure and decide against the shutdown of Denmark-based Kurdish broadcaster Roj TV. The indictment has yet to be accepted by judicial authorities, therefore it is still unclear whether the police preliminary investigation will pave the way for trials. No date has been set for any trial, either.

Last week, a mayor from the southeast of the country was sentenced to serve a 15-month time in prison, because his comments were broadcast on Roj TV.

The Kurdish party took up arms against Turkey in 1984. More than 30,000 people, mostly Kurds, have been killed in that conflict so far.

Ankara, on the other hand, is under pressure from the EU to upgrade the cultural rights of its ethnic minorities, especially the 12 million Kurds who until the 1990s were not allowed even to use their language in public.

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Danish PM Blames Turkey for Probe into Mayor Requests

HOT NEWS


06.17.2006 Saturday - ISTANBUL 00:07

Danish PM Blames Turkey for Probe into Mayor Requests
By Cihan News Agency
Published: Friday, June 16, 2006
zaman.com

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen has criticized the Turkish authorities for holding an inquiry about mayors, who wrote a letter to him urging him not to close down the Roj TV.

"They (mayors) are accused of violating the law since they wrote a letter to me, which I find very surprising", said Rasmussen in his remarks on Danish radio.

Rasmussen went on to say that it was "shocking" that such a case occurred in Turkey , a country which is seeking EU membership.

The Diyarbakir Chief Public Prosecution Office opened an investigation in early January against the mayors of 56 municipalities controlled by the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP). The mayors in question had sent a letter to the Danish PM Rasmussen, urging him not to close down Roj TV, which broadcasts from the Danish capital, Copenhagen

Turkey has repeatedly asked the Danish authorities to close down Roj TV. However, the Danish authorities have refused to close down the channel.

During a visit to Copenhagen last December, Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan left a joint press conference he was due to attend with the Danish PM Rasmussen because Roj TV representatives were in the press room.

Source : Zaman

Demand of 10 years prison punishment to 56 mayor from DTP


Demand of 10 years prison punishment to 56 mayor from DTP

AMED (15.06.2006)- A trial was opened to the 56 mayors of DTP, as a claim of helping PKK, because of sending letter to Denmark Prime Minister Rasmussen, not to close Kurdish television ROJ TV.

In the indictment, which was prepared for 56 mayors from DTP, because of sending letter to Denmark Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, not to close Roj TV, it was claimed that, 'They help to PKK, with their own request and understanding', 10 years prison punishment was requested.

In the indictment, which was prepared by Diyarbakir Public Prosecutor, it was claimed that, Roj TV makes organizational propaganda, and it was said like this; 'Above the enterprises, which were started by Turkish Government, to close Roj TV, because of their relations with PKK, a letter, which was prepared by the mayors from DTP, was sent to the Prime Minister of Denmark on December, 2005'.

In the indictment it was defended like these, in spite of writing this letter to express legal and democratic requests, Roj TV makes its broadcasting in the direction of the opinions of PKK and they ignore the threatens of the upgraded authorities of PKK againts Turkey.

'ROJ TV HAVE NOT TO BE SILENCED'

On 21st December, 2005, 56 Mayors from DTP, sent a letter to the Prime Minister of Denmark, Rasmussen, not to close Kurdish television ROJ TV. The expressions like these were in the letter, which had got the signs of the mayors, ''The voice of ROJ TV have not to be silenced, for the real democracy in Turkey. This is the common and sincere request of our people, whom we represent in the level of local government. The abolition of this voice will mean the lost of basic freedom for democracy, human rigths and democratic civilization struggle''.

7 THOUSAND LETTERS WERE SENT

Meanwhile, against the enterprises of Turkish Government about closing Kurdish television ROJ TV in Denmark and international areas, by now, 7 thousand letters were sent to Denmark authorities. The campaign of sending letters still continues.

In the 7000 letters, which were sent from Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Russia, Armenia, Germany, Austria, Sweeden, Italy, France, South Africa, Canada, Kazakhistan, Azerbaijan, Jordan, and America, it was requsted from Denmark Government not to close ROJ TV.

It was attracted attention that, in the letters, which were sent by the mayors of DTP and 400 Arabic intellectuals, in which there was Noam Chomsky, ROJ TV is an independent Kurdish television.

The invite of not to submit the anti-democratic enterprises of Turkish Government was made to at first Denmark Government and also the associations of European Union, and the members of EU.

The authorities from ROJ TV defined that, the campaign still continues.

15.06.2006
Source: Kurdishinfo

Mayors might go to jail





The Star

June 16,2006 Edition 1

Mayors might go to jail

Diyarbakir - Dozens of mayors from Turkey's troubled south-east could face up to 10 years in jail for sending a letter to Denmark's prime minister, a court indictment showed yesterday. Fifty-six mayors have been charged with "knowingly and willingly helping" the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party when they urged Denmark not to close the Danish-based Kurdish broadcaster Roj TV.

EU advarer Tyrkiet om kurdisk tv-kanal

Politiken , 16.jun 2006
EU advarer Tyrkiet om kurdisk tv-kanal
Også borgmestre har ytringsfrihed og kan skrive et brev til en dansk statsminister, pointerer EU's formandsland.

EU gav i dag Tyrkiet en klar advarsel på grund af sagen om de fængselstruede borgmestre, som har støttet den kurdiske tv-station Roj, der sender fra Danmark.

Emnet blev dog ikke drøftet på et EU-topmøde i Bruxelles, sagde Østrigs kansler, Wolfgang Schüssel, som talte på unionens vegne.

»Det er klart, at ytringsfrihed - for individer såvel som borgmestre - er utvivlsomt en del af den europæiske livsstil«, sagde Schüssel.

Risikerer ti års fængsel
56 borgmestre fra kurdiske områder i det sydøstlige Tyrkiet risikerer op til 10 års fængsel, fordi de i et brev til statsminister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V) har udtrykt støtte til Roj.

De tyrkiske myndigheder mener at have beviser for, at Roj har forbindelse til den kurdiske løsrivelsesbevægelse PKK, som er klassificeret som en terrororganisation.

/ritzau/

Fogh chokeret over tyrkiske sigtelser

Politiken 16.jun 2006 kl:07:14
Fogh chokeret over tyrkiske sigtelser
Statsministeren er chokeret over, at en gruppe tyrkiske borgmestre er blevet sigtet for at sende brev om støtte til kurdisk tv.

Statsminister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V) er stærkt bekymret over, at en gruppe tyrkiske borgmestre er blevet sigtet for at sende støttebrev om den kurdiske tv-station, Roj TV - Foto: Peter Hove Olesen

Læs også

Statsminister Anders Fogh Rasmussen (V) er chokeret over, at 56 tyrkiske borgmestre risikerer 10 år i fængsel, fordi de har skrevet et brev til ham.

I brevet skriver borgmestrene efter sigende, at den kurdiske tv-station Roj TV skal bibeholde sin sendetilladelse i Danmark.

»Det er chokerende, hvis det kan finde sted i et land, der ansøger om at komme med i EU«, sagde Fogh på et pressemøde i Bruxelles torsdag aften.

I strid med EU-principper
»Vi kan ikke bare affinde os med, at Tyrkiet gør noget, der er i lodret strid med de principper, EU stiller til et ansøgerland«, sagde han.

Roj TV er en kurdisk tv-station, der sender fra Danmark og via satellit kan ses i blandt andet Tyrkiet. Ifølge anklageskriftet har borgmestrene med deres brev til Fogh aktivt ydet hjælp til Det Kurdiske Arbejderparti (PKK), som står på EU's terrorliste.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Baydemir Questioned Over ROJ TV




ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

Baydemir Questioned Over ROJ TV

Tuesday, June 13, 2006



Diyarbakır Mayor Osman Baydemir was questioned by local prosecutors on Monday over his involvement in a letter sent to Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, calling on the Danish government not to close down the Kurdish language Roj TV station.

The letter was sent by 56 pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) mayors on Dec. 21, 2005.

Baydemir said in a written statement that he had told the prosecutor he was the one who had written the letter. He said they were also uncomfortable with Kurdish television broadcasting from overseas.

"We believe a Kurdish language television broadcasting in accordance with the law from within Turkey's borders would be better for Turkey 's European Union relations. The letter we sent said media organs should not be silenced and that the closing of Roj TV would not serve Turkish democracy."

The Diyarbakır Prosecutor's Office had initiated a criminal investigation into the sending of the letter. Apart from Baydemir, the 55 mayors who also signed it will be questioned.

Two Interior Ministry investigators had also submitted their report on the issue to the prosecutor's office.

Friday, June 09, 2006

The petition of Mr. Jelal Jalali

Prime Minister of Denmark

Mr. Anders Fogh Rasmussen

As you are aware, Turkish authorities have resorted to an orchestrated campaign of accusation and smearing propaganda against the Kurdish satellite television, ROJ TV. The aim of this unjust and antidemocratic endeavour is to divert the attention of public opinion and EU countries from the realities of Turkey and military assaults against Kurdish people. While Turkish state discriminates against Kurdish language inside Turkey, it wants to export its archaic and unacceptable policies to European countries as well.This effort of Turkey is a dire attack on freedom of expression , and obviously is contrary to Turkey's accession to European Union. Your Excellency; I urge you to defend the right of existence and free broadcasting of ROJ TV.

Jelal Jalai

6/6-2006

Monday, June 05, 2006

Mike Guluster has left the following message

Mike Guluster has left the following message for ROJ TV's Programme presenters !

At the early tv show when callers call to your station please dont let them take too

much time on the telephone tell them to get strate to the point please !