Turkish journalist could face up to ‘5 years prison’ over tweet
Sedef Kabas has been charged with ‘targeting public servants tasked with fighting against terrorism’
Turkish prosecutors are seeking a jail term of up to five years for a prominent female journalist arrested over a tweet suggesting a cover-up in a corruption scandal that shook the government, media reported on Saturday.
Sedef Kabas, a broadcast journalist and anchorwoman, has been charged with “targeting public servants tasked with fighting against terrorism,” the Dogan news agency reported.
“As understood from the content of the tweet, it is clear, without any doubt, that Kabas threatened the plaintiff... and tried to discredit him,” Dogan reported, quoting from the indictment.
Police detained Kabas last month after raiding her home in an upscale neighborhood on the Asian side of Istanbul, taking away her laptop, iPad and cellphone.
“Do not forget the name of the prosecutor who dismissed the Dec. 17 case,” Kabas had written on Twitter, including the name and the picture of the prosecutor.
She was referring to the corruption probe launched in December 2013 that is blamed by the authorities on President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s top foe, exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen.
Prosecutors in October dropped the case against 53 people, including sons of former ministers, due to “lack of evidence.”
Erdogan managed to stall the corruption investigation by sacking thousands of police and scores of judges and pushing through laws tightening state control over the judiciary and the Internet including bans of Twitter and YouTube.
The authorities last month launched raids against pro-Gulen media and detained 30 people, in a move sharply criticized by the European Union as marking a new erosion of media freedom in Turkey.
-
Turkey’s media watchdog fines three TV stations over sexual content
Each of the TV channels were fined $5,381 for showing a naked woman’s body, broadcasting pornographic scenes, and containing dialogue about condoms Television & Radio -
Turkey media bosses to be charged with ‘terror group membership’
EU condemned the arrests as going “against the European values” Print -
The witch-hunt reaches Turkey’s media
That witch-hunt has now set foot into the realm of the outspoken media Middle East -
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 to yourselves,' Erdogan says Television & 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