*Censorship *Internet Regulations *Media Freedom *Free Speech

http://revolution-news.com/turkish-government-approves-censorship-bill-3-0/

Turkish government has tried repeatedly over the course of years, to pass
restrictive bills that suggest draconian measures to interrupt free flow of
information on the internet, thus legalize censorship. Year after year a
new bill has been drafted and brought to parliament floor, dozens of
thousands protested each time, opposition parties united in standing
against government’s censorship attempts, bill would pass and president
would sign it off immediately, enabling the effectiveness of the bill.
Eventually persistent protests would Show results and opposition parties
would apply to the supreme court and court decisions would cancel the bills.

The past few weeks in Turkey’s political agenda has been of a very
different nature than what even the Turkish citizens have been used to.
First there came the homeland security bill, then passed the prison
security bill and now finally we have the internet security bill once
again. All these crucial bills have come almost simultaneously. Due to
fast-approaching national elections in early June, members of parliament
from the opposition parties have already started campaigning and
participating in premieres, thus unable to form proper opposition in the
parliament. Then again, what good is it when the governing AKP holds close
to 2/3 majority in the house with less than half of the votes in the
elections.

Even though there has been taken some measures by the opposition to use all
legislative methods and means to block the debate on the bill, thus
postponing the vote, government has not allowed the debate to take place
and directly passed the bills. The internet bill “censorship 3.0” has come
all of a sudden when the nation was discussing elections, Kurdish peace
process, homeland security bill, prison bill, upcoming centennial of
Armenian Genocide Commemoration, etc.

The opposition deputies declare the internet bill as a precaution that the
government has brought up in order to have “quiet” during the election
period, and not allow any protests or opposition rallies en-masse.
Previously, every time the internet bill had failed, the new draft had
become even harsher, bringing further mechanisms and tools of censorship
into play. The new bill openly states the methods of full government
control and bypassing of courts, rules and regulations, violating citizens
basic rights and liberties. Supreme court had already cancelled the bill
previously when it was less obvious than the new bill, and how the court
members will behave now will determine the direction of free speech in
Turkey.

The government on the other hand uses the same excuses to legitimize the
will to censor critical voices: “what will happen if children become
victims of online harassment, or what will happen if someone insults the
‘untouchable’ figures, and if someone’s basic rights get violated online?”
Thus the government suggests that a bill is necessary to directly block
access to a website without a court order or further evaluation for up to
48 hours, which will then be followed by access-blocking with the court
order. The bill does not specifically mention how long a site will be
closed down as it is not stated in the bill.

Member of the parliament from the governing AK Party, Özel has stated that
free flow of information may sound nice but politicians and citizens should
not be naive to expect unregulated freedom, as unreal propaganda also has
tendency to spread very quickly if there is no such control mechanism. Özel
also went ahead to defend the bill saying “this bill does not turn our
President or Prime Minister into a judge or prosecutor, it merely allows
them with authority to shut down access to harmful content; in the
aftermath of the incident we would still g oto courts to get warrant to
block access. And, the supreme court this time will not cancel the bill.”

The renewed internet bill suggests:

“Updating the Bill on Regulating the Publications on Internet and Combating
Cyber Crime, the foreseen changes will enable Prime Ministerial or any
ministerial office to request blocking access to or removal of content from
certain websites which violate the laws, without the necessity of a court
order. The request will be made to TIB (Telecommunications Directorate) and
decision to block access will have to be applied in the four hours
following request. The 24 hours following the decision will be open for a
judge approval, if the decision to cancel is not applied within 48 hours,
it will be automatically lifted. If simply blocking a page or certain
content does not stop the circulation of the harmful content, then the
whole website/root-supplier will be blocked. Those who have created the
harmful content will be subject to investigation and all personal
information will be supplied by ISPs including the address of the person.
Those ISPs or supporters of the harmful content creators, who do not
cooperate with the state officials will be subjected to fines covering
3.000 days to 10.000 days. The ISPs that do not fully comply with the TIB
requests and court decisions will receive heavy penalties in fines. This
law is necessary to have and be applied even without a court order in case
there is a matter of national security and public order, or for prevention
of other crimes.”



Currently there is "estimated" over 100.000 websites that are blocked in
Turkey. Citizens are heavily surveilled-on and mass surveillance systems
also are being used in profiling citizens based on their ethnicity,
language, religion, sexual orientation, political views, consumption habits
etc. Internet platform remains as the only partly-free atmospheres in
Turkey for opposition groups and in the past few years critical citizens
and groups have made serious gains mostly thanks to engagement over social
media. Before the coming national elections, governing AKP is polled
roughly around 40% and if the results come as expected they will not be
able to form a single-party government as the past 13 years. These next few
weeks might be the last chance to pass heavily restrictive laws that will
have more intervention to citizens private lives. Moreover, the new bill
might also be attempting to prevent a next round of "Charlie Hebdo Crisis",
preventing Turkish newspapers to republish the caricatures online.
http://revolution-news.com/turkish-government-approves-censorship-bill-3-0/


Gurkan Ozturan
http://TheRadicalDemocrat.wordpress.com
gsm: (009)0542 741 55 63
twitter.com/Obefintlig <http://twitter.com/GurkanOzturan>

Till