Turkish court reinstates YouTube ban

Turkish court reinstates YouTube ban

Oya Armutçu - ANKARA
Turkish court reinstates YouTube ban A local Turkish court has reversed an earlier ruling which lifted a ban on the popular video-sharing website YouTube, after the prosecution objected it.

Access to YouTube was blocked on March 27 by Turkey’s Telecommunications Authority (TİB) without a court decision, hours after recordings of a key security meeting on Syria were leaked online.

The subsequent decision issued after the blocking of access by a local court in Ankara’s Gölbaşı district justified the ban on the grounds of a law incriminating insults to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish Republic.

The Gölbaşı Court of Peace ordered on April 4 that access to the website be unblocked following an appeal from the Union of Turkish Bars Associations. However, the court also ruled that access to 15 videos would remain blocked, according to Anadolu Agency.

Gölbaşı Prosecutor's Office objected the ruling, arguing that the ban should continue as 15 videos remain on the website and a URL-specific blocking is not technically possible. Gölbaşı Criminal Court of First Instance, which is a higher court, has reversed the earlier verdict on April 5 by ruling that the ban will continue until the "criminal content" is removed by YouTube.

Davutoğlu stresses national security

The ban on YouTube less than a week after Twitter added more fuel to the outrage against the government’s tightening grip on the Internet by empowering the TİB with the authority to block access regardless of a court order.

Following the controversial decision, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu had emphasized that the YouTube ban was a question of national security, while dismissing that it could be interpreted as a violation of people’s freedoms.

“The Twitter ban is related to privacy, while the ban on YouTube is a matter of national security. It should not be perceived as a restriction of freedoms,” Davutoğlu said.

Another lawsuit at an Ankara administrative court against the decision filed by the Ankara Bar Association, demanding a stay of execution and a cancelation of the YouTube ban, is still pending.