Dutch journalist to be tried in Turkey on ‘terror propaganda’ charges

Ms Geerdink accused of supporting outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party in online posts

The case may increase concern among other western partners about whether intolerance to criticism under president Tayyip Erdogan (above) is mounting. Photograph: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg.
The case may increase concern among other western partners about whether intolerance to criticism under president Tayyip Erdogan (above) is mounting. Photograph: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg.

A Turkish court will try a Dutch journalist on charges she disseminated “terrorist propaganda”, a move that is likely to deepen western fears over press freedom in the country.

The indictment accuses freelance journalist Frederike Geerdink of posting messages on Facebook and Twitter in favour of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), she told Reuters by telephone. She denied the charges.

If found guilty, Ms Geerdink faces up to five years in prison.

“I am constantly thinking about how to do my job as a journalist and . . . always make conscientious choices and choose my words carefully,” Ms Geerdink said.

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While Kurdish and Turkish journalists are often targeted by prosecutors, her indictment is a rare instance of a foreign journalist being pursued on criminal charges in Turkey.

Security forces briefly detained Ms Geerdink on January 6th and raided her home in Diyarbakir, the largest city in Turkey's predominantly Kurdish southeast. Her detention sparked a protest from Dutch foreign minister Bert Koenders, who was visiting Turkey at the time.

The case may also increase concern among other western partners about whether intolerance to criticism under president Tayyip Erdogan is mounting.

Sensitive topic

Ms Geerdink has reported from Turkey since 2006 and focuses mainly on Kudish issues, a highly sensitive topic after a decades-long insurgency by PKK militants demanding greater autonomy, in which an estimated 40,000 people have been killed.

Efforts to bring a permanent end to the bloodshed since a ceasefire in 2012 have stalled in recent months.

She is the author of De jongens zijn dood (The Boys Are Dead), a 2013 book due to be published in Turkish next month that examines a 2011 bombing by Turkish military planes that killed 35 Kurdish civilians.

Reuters