Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Dutch Journalist Faces Terror Propaganda Charges in Turkey

While the Dutch Foreign Secretary was visiting Turkey, the anti terror police arrested Dutch journalist Frederike Geerdink on suspicion of 'terrorism propaganda'. It is now reported that Geerdink is facing charges. Turkey is one of the worst oppressors of the free press. 

UPDATE:




Jan. 7, 2015


TURKEY ARRESTS ANOTHER DUTCH JOURNALIST! 


Political party VNL has demanded an explanation from the Government for the latest outrage.



Jan. 6, 2015

TURKEY RELEASES DUTCH JOURNALIST DETAINED FOR PKK PROPAGANDA



UPDATE: The journalist was released after she testified at the Diyarbakır Police Department's counterterrorism unit. (Source)


TURKEY DETAINS DUTCH JOURNALIST FOR PKK PROPAGANDA

This is the news from inside the country!

TURKEY DETAINS DUTCH JOURNALIST WHILE FORSEC IS VISITING


A Dutch journalist based in Turkey has tweeted that she has been detained on charges of 'terrorism propaganda'. Frederike Geerdink, who moved to Turkey in 2006 and has been reporting from the south eastern province of Diyarbakir since 2012, said Turkish police raided her house and took her to the police station.

Geerdink, who is also author of the blog KurdishMatters.com, has been reporting on Kurdish issues, human rights, and women's rights in Turkey. The journalist's arrest came as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan officially claimed that "there is no freer press, either in Europe or anywhere in the world, than in Turkey".

Dutch MP Mark Verheijen confirmed on Twitter the report of Geerdink's detention and called on Holland's Foreign Minister Bert Koenders, who is on an official visit in Ankara, to act swiftly: 

The Dutch ministry of foreign affairs tweeted in reply: "Shocked by @fgeerdink arrest. Will discuss personally with colleague [Mevlut] Cavusoglu [Turkish foreign minister] here in Ankara".

 Geerdink's colleagues and friends reacted on Twitter to her arrest: 

Turkey is one of the worst jailers of journalists, topping the annual census of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) in 2012 and 2013. Last December, the arrests of 23 journalists accused of forming an illegal armed terrorist organisation and trying to seize control of the state raised an international uproar. Among the arrested was the editor-in-chief of Turkey's largest daily newspaper, Ekrem Dumanli of Zaman.

Their arrests came just two days after Erdogan vowed to "overthrow" what he called a "network of treason" with clear reference to media linked to an influential cleric in self-exile in the US, Fethullah Gulen. Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the arrests will harm media freedom in Turkey. The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) called it a "brazen assault on press freedom and Turkish democracy". The International Press Institute (IPI) saw the arrests as a "part of a trend by Turkey's government in recent years to use terrorism accusations to bring its critics to heel". 

(Source


Note: 
Ironically and for reasons best known it herself, Miss Geerdink has blocked yours truly on Twitter. We have never had any prior contact with her. This confirms our suspicions a blacklist is circulating among journalists, listing ' enemies'  and dissenters.



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