Turkish journalist gets 27 years in absentia for espionage
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[December 23, 2020]
ANKARA (Reuters) -Turkish journalist Can Dundar was
sentenced in absentia to 27 years and six months in prison for espionage
and aiding an armed terrorist organisation, his lawyers said on
Wednesday, calling the verdict politically motivated.
Dundar, the former editor-in-chief of Turkish daily newspaper Cumhuriyet,
and a colleague, Erdem Gul, were both sentenced in 2016 to five years in
prison for publishing a video purporting to show Turkish intelligence
trucking weapons into Syria. They were later released pending appeal.
Now a resident of Germany, he had faced up to 35 years in jail for
allegedly supporting terrorism and military or political espionage.
Dundar's lawyers refused to attend the final hearing. "We do not want to
be part of a practice to legitimize a previously decided, political
verdict," they said in a written statement ahead of the hearing.
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas criticised the ruling as a "hard blow
against independent journalistic work in Turkey" which he called a
fundamental right.
"Journalism is not a crime but an indispensable service to society -
even and especially when it looks critically and investigatively on the
fingers of those in power," Maas told RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland.
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Can Dundar, former editor of opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet,
addresses a news conference in Berlin, Germany, September 28, 2018.
REUTERS/Tobias Schlie/File Photo
For critics of President Tayyip Erdogan, Dundar has become a symbol
of what they say is Turkey's sweeping crackdown on press freedom,
especially since a failed coup in 2016. The government says the
courts are independent and that it is responding to threats facing
the country.
The court earlier this month delayed its verdict after Dundar's
lawyers asked for the judges to be replaced to ensure a fair trial,
a request that was rejected.
An Istanbul court had declared Dundar a fugitive and seized all his
assets in Turkey.
(Reporting by Ece Toksabay; Additional reporting by Riham Alkousaa;
Editing by Jonathan Spicer and Kirsten Donovan)
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