-
-
- Live
Erdogan: Turkey has ‘world’s freest press’
Turkey was the world’s top jailer of journalists in 2012 and 2013
Turkey has the freest press in the world, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Friday, brushing off accusations that media freedoms were being eroded under his rule.
“Nowhere in the world is the press freer than it is in Turkey. I'm very sure of myself when I say this,” he said in a televised speech to a conference in Ankara.
“The press is so free in Turkey that one can make insults, slanders, defamation, racism and commit hate crimes that are not tolerated even in democratic countries.”
“I've personally experienced this, so has my family,” he added.
Turkey was the world’s top jailer of journalists in 2012 and 2013, ahead of Iran and China, according to the international Committee to Protect Journalists, before improving to tenth place this year.
Erdogan’s comments came less than two weeks after police raids on opposition media linked to Erdogan’s arch-foe Fethullah Gulen prompted a furious reaction from the European Union.
Erdogan has blamed Gulen for concocting stunning corruption allegations that emerged last year concerning ministers and his own inner circle that also touched his own son Bilal.
The remarks also coincided with the release pending trial of a 16-year-old schoolboy who was controversially arrested on charges of insulting Erdogan by accusing him of being the “chief of corruption.”
But Erdogan said: “You cannot insult them (his family) like this in any other country. There is no limit to the insults (we receive). You cannot run such headlines in Europe or the U.S.”
“Europeans accuse us as if such things never happen in their countries. No one raises their voice when journalists are detained in Europe.”
He launched another bitter attack on the European Union, the latest episode in a bitter row that erupted with the EU's criticism of the raids on opposition media.
“We are not the scapegoats of the EU,” said Erdogan.
“We are not a country that Europe can criticize, wag its finger at and scold without them looking in the mirror themselves.”
“Those days are over. The old Turkey does not exist anymore,” he added.
The slanging match with Brussels has dealt a new blow to Turkey’s long-running bid to join the 28-member bloc, but analysts believe it has not yet been written off.
-
Turkey media bosses to be charged with ‘terror group membership’
EU condemned the arrests as going “against the European values”
Print -
EU ministers agree harder line on Turkey over clampdown on media
Diplomatic sources said the statement, drafted before Sunday’s crackdown, had been ...
Television and Radio -
The witch-hunt reaches Turkey’s media
That witch-hunt has now set foot into the realm of the outspoken media
Middle East Opinion -
Turkey dismisses EU criticism of raids on media outlets
'Whether the EU takes us in or not, we have no such worry. You keep your opinions ...
Television and Radio -
Social media storm over top Turkey cleric’s luxury Mercedes
Mehmet Gormez will reportedly be cruising in a Mercedes s500, worth some $435,000
Digital -
Two police officers killed, one wounded in attack in Turkey’s east – media
One officer was killed at the scene while the second policemen died at a hospital
News -
Turkey imposes media blackout over Iraq hostages
Turkey has imposed a ban on media reporting about the seizure by Islamic militants ...
Print -
Fugitive ex-VP Tareq al-Hashimi dubs Iraq’s crisis as ‘Arab Spring’
Iraq’s former vice president, who has resided in Turkey since leaving Iraq, ...
Middle East -
Turkey PM accuses international media of spying
Recep Tayyip Erdogan called CNN's Ivan Watson a “lackey” who had been “caught red ...
Television and Radio