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KurdistanObserver.com
Turkey And Denmark Clash Over Press Freedom
Nov 16, 2005
By Teresa Küchler
/ EU Observer
Turkish prime minister Tayyip
Erdogan boycotted a joint press conference with the Danish leader in protest at
the presence of a Kurdish TV station on Tuesday (15 November), highlighting
European values on free speech.
"There is a fundamental difference between Turkey and Denmark in matters of
freedom of expression," the Danish prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said at
the press conference his Turkish counterpart avoided.
The Turkish prime minister was visiting the Danish capital Copenhagen as the
first stop in a tour around EU capitals to discuss the prospects of Turkey's EU
membership.
Mr Erdogan stayed away from the press conference in protest at the presence of a
journalist from the Danish-based TV channel Roj TV.
Turkey has repeatedly urged Denmark to close the channel, which sends news,
entertainment, debate and children's' programs to Kurds in Denmark, arguing it
is financed by the Kurdish rebel party, the PKK, which is on the EU's list of
terrorist organisations.
Danish police are investigating the station, but have not found evidence of
links to forbidden organisations so far.
Mr Rasmussen said he regretted that Mr Erdogan did not attend the press
conference, but pointed out that excluding the Kurdish TV-station from the
conference would have violated the principles of freedom of expression in the
European Union, which Turkey aspires to join.
He added that Turkey must realise that there are a few strict conditions that
have to be fulfilled if Turkey wants to join the EU one day.
Turkish-Danish relations sore
Ironically, the official visit of Tayyip Erdogan to Denmark was aimed at
improving relations between the two countries following a two-month row over
press freedom and Islam.
In September, Danish daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten invited cartoonists to
submit drawings of the prophet Mohammed after an author complained that nobody
dared illustrate his book on Mohammed.
Twelve cartoons were published, according to the newspaper, as "a test of
whether fear of Islamic retribution has begun to limit freedom of expression in
Denmark."
The cartoons caused outrage in Muslim communities in and outside Denmark, with
eleven Islamic countries including Turkey writing official letters to prime
minister Rasmussen to express offence and demand an official apology.
Mr Rasmussen has persistently said that freedom of expression is the very
foundation of Danish democracy and that his government has no means of
influencing the press.
"Freedom of expression is important, but more important is what is holy for me.
I would never abuse my freedom of expression to attack those things that are
holy to Anders Fogh Rasmussen," Mr Erdogan said in Copenhagen.
The timing of the Danish-Turkish clash is unfortunate, as earlier this week a
survey conducted by statistics company Ramboll Management for Jyllands-Posten
showed that 55 percent of Danes are opposed to Turkey joining the EU. |
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