Turkish court sentences journalists to long prison terms

Employees of secular Cumhuriyet newspaper found guilty of ‘aiding a terror group’

Cumhuriyet chairman Akin Atalay  and his wife Adalet Atalay speak to journalists after being released from Silivri prison outside of Istanbul on Thursday. Photograph: Bulent Kilic/AFP/Getty Images
Cumhuriyet chairman Akin Atalay and his wife Adalet Atalay speak to journalists after being released from Silivri prison outside of Istanbul on Thursday. Photograph: Bulent Kilic/AFP/Getty Images

A Turkish court has convicted journalists and other senior staff members from an opposition newspaper on terror charges, in a case that has exacerbated concerns over press freedom.

Turkey’s official Anadolu news agency said 14 Cumhuriyet employees were found guilty of “aiding a terror group without being a member”.

They were handed sentences ranging from 2½ to 7½ years.

All 14 staff were released pending appeal, while three people were acquitted.

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The newspaper said those convicted include editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu, leading journalists and columnists and a cartoonist.

Outside the courthouse, Mr Sabuncu called the verdict an "attack" on journalists aimed to "stop us from doing journalism in Turkey, to make us fearful when we're doing journalism in Turkey".

He said they would continue their work even if they have to go back to prison.

A total of 19 Cumhuriyet staff members were accused of "sponsoring terror organisations", including Kurdish militants, a far-left group and the network of US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government blames for a failed coup in July 2016. Mr Gulen denies involvement.

The court convicted Akin Atalay, the board chairman, but ordered him released from prison. Eleven others were released earlier in the trial after months in jail. Five staff members were tried without being imprisoned.

A  January 2015 photograph shows a police officer standing guard outside the Ankara offices of the daily Cumhuriyet, the leading pro-secular Turkish newspaper. Photograph: Adem Altan/AFP/Getty Images
A January 2015 photograph shows a police officer standing guard outside the Ankara offices of the daily Cumhuriyet, the leading pro-secular Turkish newspaper. Photograph: Adem Altan/AFP/Getty Images

The prosecutions of two defendants who are not in Turkey, including former chief editor Can Dundar, were separated from this case.

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A man suspected of using a Twitter account critical of the government was also on trial. Kemal Aydogdu was sentenced to 10 years for terror group membership and will remain in custody.

Authorities arrested tens of thousands on terror charges and dismissed more than 110,000 from government jobs in a massive crackdown that followed the attempted coup.

More than 38,000 remain behind bars on alleged links to Mr Gulen. Journalists, opposition legislators and activists have been imprisoned.

Prominent investigative journalist Ahmet Sik tweeted after his guilty verdict, alluding to Mr Erdogan: "No dictator in history ever won the war to silence the righteous. We will win."

Kadri Gursel, an influential columnist, said "the case against journalism would go down in history" in his final defence to the court.

The journalists were put on trial on the outskirts of Istanbul in the compound of a maximum-security prison.

Turkey ranked 157 out of 180 countries in Reporters Without Borders’ 2018 index on press freedom. – AP