15 journalister i Turkiet döms till fängelse
15 anställda på den oppositionella nyhetstidningen Cumhuriyet i Turkiet dömdes på onsdagen till fängelse för terrorism och inblandning i kuppförsöket 2016. Den turkiska domstolen frikände tre personer, rapporterar Reuters.
Domstolen beslutade också att målet mot den framstående journalisten Can Dundar, tidningens tidigare chefredaktör, skulle fortsätta separat.
bakgrund
Cumhuriyet
Wikipedia (en)
Cumhuriyet (Turkish pronunciation: [d͡ʒum.huː.ɾi.ˈjet], The Republic) is the oldest up-market Turkish daily newspaper. Headquartered in Istanbul, the newspaper also has offices in Ankara and İzmir.
Established on 7 May 1924 by journalist Yunus Nadi Abalıoğlu, a confidant of the Turkish Republic's founder Atatürk, the newspaper has subscribed to a staunchly secular, republican course. In the past closely affiliated with the Kemalist Republican People's Party (CHP), the center-left newspaper turned to a more independent course over time, advocating democracy, social liberal values and free markets.
In 2015 it was awarded the Freedom of Press Prize by international NGO Reporters Without Borders for making a stand against the government's mounting pressure. Shortly thereafter, Cumhuriyet's editor-in-chief Can Dündar and the newspaper's Ankara representative Erdem Gül were arrested facing sentences up to life imprisonment. During the last decade, the newspaper's staff has also been physically attacked, with the 2008 molotov attack against Cumhuriyet's headquarters in Istanbul's Şişli district being particularly significant. By the end of 2016, almost half of the paper's reporters, columnists and executives had been jailed by the Erdogan government.
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