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SERKAN DEMİRTAŞ > Turkish media in betrayal of democracy

I admit that the title of this column is an assertive one. But, unfortunately, it describes the current state of the Turkish media in the most suitable way. A good majority of journalists are part of this betrayal, some on purpose and some not, but, at the end of the day, that counts for the whole media sector.

It’s a well-established fact that freedom of expression has been deteriorating significantly under the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government, especially since 2008. The first and most important hit was the world-record three-billion-dollar tax levy issued against the country’s largest media group in the late 2000s for its coverage of corruption allegedly linked with ruling party officials.

That followed the detention and arrest of dozens of journalists as part of ongoing prosecutions on alleged coup attempts and other cases. Led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and followed by top government officials, a very strongly worded media-bashing campaign found its place as an important element of ruling party policies, in the meantime. This campaign, fueled by growing intolerance against AKP opponents, also included veiled threats against the media bosses that had to fire some government-critical columnists or TV producers. With the recent victim of this tradition, veteran journalist Hasan Cemal, the number of sidelined or silenced colleagues has reached more than two dozen so far.

Turkey is passing through a landmark transformation with very important processes aiming to solve the Kurdish question, rewrite the Constitution and accelerate the EU process. The role of the media in this process is very, very important in terms of providing sound and correct information to the public. The very essence of the existence of the media is its ability to meet the people’s right to demand accurate information.

A media so under threat that it is exercising self-censorship or underreporting on all of these sensitive issues would not naturally serve for the good sake of democracy. Media, as the fourth power in modern democracies, is the most influential element in building public opinion either for or against the government but always in the service of the public interest.

Those in the media who believe that they are doing the right thing by not questioning government policies are in fact denying the role of free journalism.

It is also a fact that the problem is rather structural because of problematic ownership in the media sector. Those in the government who complained about it a decade ago are now benefiting from it as they successfully manage to create their own media.

An institutional democracy requires institutionalized media. An institutionalized media requires individually and structurally independent journalists both economically and consciously. The contrary could only bring an embedded media with fully dependent journalists on those who have the power. And that is not compatible with contemporary democracy but with old-fashioned authoritarian reigns.

March/20/2013

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Murat

3/20/2013 10:51:21 PM

All true unfortunately. Erdogan is on his way to become a polished Assad. How ironic.

Zlatan Zinho

3/20/2013 10:28:48 PM

An excellent column, but the irony is that it is arguably the nominally 'secular' media that has self-censored the most with a view to maximising their commercial interests. These days you are more likely to read an article critical of the AKP in Zaman than you are in Milliyet!

Baris

3/20/2013 6:10:08 PM

Hakan Salci, you have misinterpreted Erdogan's words from 1997. His stop was not democracy, it was sharia. His aim at the time was to use the democratic process to first be elected to power, then ditch democracy to set up sharia (his train stop). Well, he has been elected democratically for the last 3 terms and is stronger than ever, but has done nothing to set up sharia. Clearly he is an authoritarian leader and his understanding of democracy can be limited, but he is no longer pursuing sharia.

mara mcglothin

3/20/2013 4:50:27 PM

Will this be printed in Turkish somewhere? If not, it should be.

mara mcglothin

3/20/2013 4:06:00 PM

In a word, NO SONNU. Journalist must tell the truth as they know it to the public and then let the public decide what is their own truth. Censorship has no place in democracy.

sonnu global

3/20/2013 10:34:52 AM

Only crime and the criminal, it is true, confront us with the perplexity of radical evil; but only the hypocrite is really rotten to the core. We can not blame Mr PM unless every body wakes up and realize this country doesn't belongs to one single person.Democracy has never been enemy of any human being .......do people really know what democracy means ?

Hakan Salci

3/20/2013 2:50:10 AM

Finally a piece which actually connects the dots to one another. Everybody wake-up and smell the coffee, Erdogan and his Gestapo have only 1 thing in mind; quote, "When the bus arrives at my stop (democracy), that is where I get off". The man is practically telling everyone what his intentions are and everyone still praises him for being 'democratic'; he must be stupefied at how he is getting away with it.

coolturk

3/20/2013 2:18:15 AM

God bless you. I wish true patriats like you, continue to bring this unacceptable situation, up front and center.
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