ISTANBUL – The European Court of Human Rights yesterday ruled that Turkey had prevented public access to Europe’s literary heritage and violated freedom of expression when it banned a classic erotic novel.
The Strasbourg-based court ruled in favour of a petition from publisher Rahmi Akdas, who in 1999 printed a Turkish translation of French writer Guillaume Apollinaire's 1907 novel, The Eleven Thousand Rods, which has passages on sadism, homosexuality, paedophilia and necrophilia.
Mr Akdas was convicted of morality crimes and fined about €1,100 and an order was issued to destroy all copies of the book. A Turkish appeals court later upheld the conviction but struck down the destruction order.
Turkey has revised laws covering freedom of speech to bring them more in line with EU standards as it seeks to advance its bid to join the bloc, but it still censors books and websites and occasionally jails journalists.
The European court said in its ruling that states can legally interfere to protect morals if there is a pressing social need, but no such need was present in Mr Akdas’s case since a century had elapsed since The Eleven Thousand Rods first appeared and it was now part of Europe’s literary canon.
The novel was banned in France until 1970.
“The heavy fine imposed and the seizure of copies of the book had not been proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued [to protect morals] and had thus not been necessary in a democratic society,” the ruling said.– (Reuters)