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Miss Turkey Gets 14 Months Prison for “Publicly Insulting” Turkey’s Erdogan
The Duran ^ | June 1, 2016 | ALEX CHRISTOFOROU

Posted on 07/21/2016 9:08:49 AM PDT by Fitzy_888

Miss Turkey 2006 has been found guilty for sharing a poem that insulted Turkish President Erdogan.

Erdogan’s dictatorship continues to crack down on potential threats to the Turkish state. This time, the dangerous Miss Turkey 2006 (27-year-old Merve Buyuksarac) has been found guilty for sharing a poem that insulted Sultan Erdogan.

The Istanbul court gave Miss Turkey a suspended sentence of 14 months for “publicly insulting” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on condition that she does not insult the Sultan again within the next five years.

Merve Buyuksarac is the latest of over 2,000 defamation cases President Erdogan has filed in two years.

The Turkish law bans insulting the president…something that is quite unbecoming of a NATO member, and EU partner.

The case was based on a satirical verse she reposted on her Instagram account in 2014.

The so-called ‘Master’s Poem, ’ an adaptation of the Turkish national anthem, allegedly criticizes Erdogan, who served as prime minister for more than a decade prior to becoming president and has often been called “Buyuk Usta” [the Big Master]. The poem did not mention Erdogan by name, but made reference to a corruption scandal that allegedly involved his family.

During the hearings, the President’s lawyer, Hatice Ozay, stressed that Buyuksarac’s Instagram post had gone beyond “the limits of criticism” and was in fact “an attack” on Erdogan’s personal rights.

Buyuksarac was briefly arrested at the time the post was made, but then freed as she denied insulting Erdogan. The case however resurfaced, with Tuesday’s court’s decision based on a previously rarely-used Turkish law that forbids insulting the head of state.

The law has been used increasingly often lately to silence those critical of Erdogan’s policies. Since becoming president in 2014, he has filed up to 2,000 cases under this law in trials targeting journalists, foreign and domestic, academics, politicians, comedians, and now – models.

This spring has in fact been rich with cases of Ankara’s witch-hunt on those critical of the current government.

Also on Tuesday, Cengiz Candar, a former columnist for Radikal and Hurriyet newspapers who’s been in the profession for over 40 years, appeared in Istanbul court accused of insulting Erdogan in a series of articles he wrote in the summer of 2015, criticizing Turkey’s renewed conflict against Kurdish rebels. The veteran journalist and an adviser to the late Turkish head of state Turgut Ozal faces up to four years in prison if found guilty.

“These court cases must come to an end,” he told reporters outside the courthouse. “These trials must immediately end with acquittals so that the presidency of the Turkish Republic can preserve its respectability.”

In March, the Turkish government shut down and reformed opposition newspaper Zaman, previously a strong critic of the President. Overnight the newspaper turned into a government mouthpiece.

Four Turkish academics faced trial after having been charged with spreading “terrorist propaganda.” Their alleged crime was to denounce the renewed conflict with Turkey’s Kurds, being part of a group of more than 1,000 scholars who signed a declaration in January that was critical of the Turkish government’s military intervention into the predominantly Kurdish southeast of the country.

Foreign journalists have also been targeted and arrested. The latest incidents involved German TV journalist Volker Schwenck and Dutch journalist Ebru Umar. Schwenck was going to the Turkish-Syrian border to report on refugees, but instead was denied entry into Turkey and spent six hours in detention at Istanbul airport. Umar was briefly detained in Turkey over Twitter posts critical of the Turkish President.

Turkey also shut down Russian news agency Sputnik’s website in the country and blacklisted its Istanbul bureau chief, refusing him entry to the country and seizing his residence permit and press credentials

“Erdogan’s administration doesn’t seem to tolerate any criticism at all. Any journalist, would they criticize Erdogan, risk being imprisoned and legally harassed. In short, journalism is in coma in Turkey,” Dr. Y. Alp Aslandogan, President of the Alliance for Shared Values and a Board Member of the Gulen Institute told RT, adding that he overall situation with respect to fundamental freedoms in Turkey will only get worse unless the Turkish people interfere.

“The fate of the country is up to the people of Turkey. Unless there is an outcry from Turkish people I don’t know how this situation can be resolved. I’m just hoping that Turkish people will awaken to what’s going on.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: erdogan; muslimwomen; muslimworld; turkey
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To: Fitzy_888

Megalomaniac dictators always do the same things when threatened. Bullies are so predictable.


41 posted on 07/21/2016 10:04:58 AM PDT by MarMema (dog lives matter)
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To: rjsimmon
Miss Turkey 2006 has been found guilty for sharing a poem that insulted Turkish President Erdogan.

I'm impressed! Beautiful AND she found a rhyme for Erdogan!


42 posted on 07/21/2016 10:08:37 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Fitzy_888

I’ll bring the cranberry sause.


43 posted on 07/21/2016 10:33:36 AM PDT by longfellow (Bill Maher, the 21st hijacker.)
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To: Snickering Hound
"Turkish girls are more hairy than Cousin It.:

LOL! Apparently this Turkish girls plucks and/or waxes.

44 posted on 07/21/2016 10:37:03 AM PDT by A Navy Vet (An Oath is Forever)
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To: Fitzy_888

I foresee a large exodus from Turkey in the next few months. Those getting out will be the lucky ones.


45 posted on 07/21/2016 10:39:29 AM PDT by Rummyfan (Let us now try liberty.)
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To: Rummyfan

Want to take a bet on how she will look after 14 months in a turkish prison?


46 posted on 07/21/2016 10:43:05 AM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?.)
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To: Mr. K
"pretty sure she wont look like that after a year in a Turkish prison."

Suspended sentence....ain't going to prison.

47 posted on 07/21/2016 10:55:02 AM PDT by diogenes ghost
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To: Rummyfan
I foresee a large exodus from Turkey in the next few months. Those getting out will be the lucky ones.

Prostitution is actually legal in Turkey on paper, although brothels in Ankara have been shut down by court order.

Nude beaches on the Adriatic too, quite popular with the Euros looking for a cheap vacation.

You can bet that women unwilling to go under the veil will be fleeing west, it's going to get real bad.

48 posted on 07/21/2016 11:11:06 AM PDT by Snickering Hound
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To: Snickering Hound
Nude beaches on the Adriatic too, quite popular with the Euros looking for a cheap vacation.

The Adriatic?! That's Italy or the former Yugoslavian states.

49 posted on 07/21/2016 11:53:17 AM PDT by Rummyfan (Let us now try liberty.)
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To: Rummyfan
The Adriatic?! That's Italy or the former Yugoslavian states.

Ooops, meant the Aegean...

50 posted on 07/21/2016 11:56:20 AM PDT by Snickering Hound
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