Turkish chief says authorized motion might be taken towards organisations producing tales that undermine ‘nationwide ethical values’.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened Turkish media with reprisals in the event that they disseminate content material that damages the nation’s core values.
In a discover printed within the Official Gazette, he stated measures had been wanted to guard Turkey’s “nationwide tradition” and forestall its kids’s growth “from being adversely affected because of publicity to dangerous content material on all written, verbal and visible media”.
Erdogan didn’t specify what such content material was, however stated authorized motion could be taken towards “overt or covert actions via the media aimed toward undermining our nationwide and ethical values and disrupting our household and social construction”.
Turkey’s chief has been in energy for almost 20 years and has typically criticised media content material that’s out of step with values espoused by his AK Occasion.
Turkey has in recent times additionally moved to extend media oversight, with about 90 p.c of main media now owned by the state or near the federal government.
Turkish values
The RTUK radio and tv watchdog has sweeping oversight over all on-line content material, which it additionally has the ability to take away.
It has fined TV stations over footage it says violates Turkish values, reminiscent of music movies it has labelled “erotic”, LGBTQ references or content material it deems to have insulted the president.
Tens of hundreds have been prosecuted underneath the latter legislation together with Sedef Kabas, a well known journalist jailed final week pending trial after posting a proverb about Erdogan’s palace on her Twitter account and repeating it on an opposition tv channel.
Erdogan on Wednesday promised Kabas’s “offence” wouldn’t go unpunished.
He denounced a suggestion by the opposition Republican Individuals’s Occasion that the crime of insulting the president, which carries a jail sentence of 1 to 4 years, ought to be scrapped.
The Turkish journalists’ union has referred to as Kabas’s arrest a “severe assault on freedom of expression”.