Turkey: CIVICUS joins call for the release journalist Sedef Kabaş

We join the Coalition For Women In Journalism (CFWIJ) and other press freedom organisations and journalists in calling on Turkey to release senior journalist Sedef Kabaş.

Charged with “insulting the president”, after she used a popular Circassian proverb on a live television segment, Sedef was sent to prison on January 22, 2022. The unfounded imprisonment of the noted journalist was met with widespread condemnation from local and international press freedom organizations as well as rights organizations and press freedom defenders. Yet, the Turkish government and judiciary appear relentless and Sedef remains behind bars.

On January 14, 2022, while discussing President Erdoğan at a show called “The Arena of Democracy”, hosted by pro-opposition TV channel TELE1, Sedef said, “Cattle does not become a king when it enters a palace, but the palace becomes a barn”. Her remark prompted backlash from government officials and pro-Erdoğan corners. The journalist was arrested from her home by law enforcement officers at around 2 AM on the night of January 21.

Sedef has since clarified that she was using a proverb and maintains that it was not intended as an insult to the president. When she was produced before the courts on January 22, the court dubbed her a “flight risk” and ordered her imprisonment. On January 26, the court rejected her lawyer’s appeal for her release. The journalist is currently being held in Bakırköy Women's Prison in İstanbul.

Meanwhile, TELE1 was fined for the episode for “inciting hatred” by the country’s telecommunications watchdog RTÜK, which also banned the show for five episodes.

Sedef, a renowned political journalist, frequently appears on political talk shows and television segments hosted by the few opposition television stations remaining in Turkey. As a former television host herself, she has amassed a following for her journalistic work. She now runs her own channel on YouTube, Sedef Kabaş TV, on which she invites guests and discusses politics. The channel has over 89,000 subscribers. At least 912,000 accounts also follow the journalist on Twitter.

Her arrest and subsequent imprisonment on a charge so frivolous reflect the dire state of press freedom in the country. Erdoğan, dubbed a press freedom predator by international media freedom watchdog Reporters Sans Frontiers (RSF), has propagated a hostile attitude towards journalists since he came to power. The country has witnessed an increasingly declining space for free speech and press freedom in the past decade, with state institutions, the law and judiciary, all weaponized against dissenting voices. Journalists, activists and opponents to the incumbent government as well as citizen protestors, have been dealt with a heavy hand, with police brutality, legal harassment and imprisonments becoming the norm.

In the same vein, scores of critical journalists, human rights defenders, activists and political opponents have been hit with the charge of “insulting the president”. A conviction for this charge can carry a sentence of up to four years in jail. Moreover, according to Article 299 of the Turkish penal code, an added penalty may be imposed on the defendant if the insult was made in public. The law has been criticized widely but to no avail. In October 2021, the European Court of Human Rights called on Turkey to change the law but the authorities continue to weaponize this law against critics and opponents.

The Coalition For Women In Journalism and the undersigned organizations and individuals view Sedef’s arrest as an extension of the Turkish government’s intolerance for free speech and media freedom. We call on Turkey to cease its attacks on the free press, which is essential for the success of any democracy. The CFWIJ and the undersigned demand the immediate release of Sedef Kabaş and condemn the fine imposed on TELE1.

Signatories:

  1. The Coalition For Women In Journalism (CFWIJ)
  2. Article 19
  3. Association of Journalists of Kosovo
  4. Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN)
  5. CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation
  6. European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF)
  7. European Federation of Journalists (EFJ)
  8. Human Rights Association Women’s Commission
  9. IFEX
  10. Initiative for Freedom of Expression - Turkey
  11. Media and Law Studies Association (MLSA)
  12. Overseas Press Club of America (OPC)
  13. PEN America
  14. Public News Service, USA
  15. Progressive Journalists Association (ÇGD)
  16. Platform for Independent Journalism (P24)
  17. The Journalists’ Union of Turkey (TGS)
  18. Turkish Press, Broadcasting and Printer Workers’ Union (DİSK Basın-İş)
  19. Women In Journalism Institute, Canada (WIJI)
  20. Pakistan Press Foundation
  21. Amberin Zaman, Journalist, Turkey
  22. Ayşen Şahin, Journalist, Turkey
  23. Banu Güven, Journalist, Turkey
  24. Can Dündar, Journalist, Turkey
  25. Elçin Poyrazlar, Journalist, Turkey
  26. Hayko Bağdat, Journalist, Turkey
  27. İrem Afşin, Journalist, Turkey
  28. Keith Ross Leckie, Author, Journalist, Filmmaker, Canada
  29. Melis Alphan, Journalist, Turkey
  30. Nevşin Mengü, Journalist, Turkey
  31. Saliha Yayla, Journalist, Turkey
  32. Sevda Karaca, Journalist, Turkey
  33. Tuba Çameli, Journalist, Turkey
  34. Alexander Duarte, Journalist, Venezuela
  35. Ava Homa, Author, Iran
  36. Abdulrahman Matar, Writer and Journalist, Novalest, Canada
  37. Anneli Andre-Barrett, Refugee Integration Mentor & Editor, Canada

Civic space in Turkey is rated as Repressed by the CIVICUS Monitor  

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