Turkey orders releases in Cumhuriyet newspaper trial but keeps prominent journalists in jail

Turkey orders releases in Cumhuriyet newspaper trial but keeps prominent journalists in jail
The hugely controversial trial in Istanbul of 17 writers, cartoonists and executives from the Cumhuriyet daily newspaper on "terror" charges began earlier this week.
2 min read
28 July, 2017
The trial has been ridiculed as absurd by supporters [Getty]

A Turkish court on Friday ordered the release of seven people in the trial of staff from an opposition newspaper seen as a test for press freedom under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, but kept the most prominent journalists in jail.

The hugely controversial trial in Istanbul of 17 writers, cartoonists and executives from the Cumhuriyet daily newspaper on "terror" charges – ridiculed as absurd by supporters – began earlier this week.

After five days of intense hearings, the judge ordered that seven suspects, including cartoonist Musa Kart, be released ahead of the next hearing under judicial supervision, meaning they have to report to the authorities regularly.

However the judge also ordered that four other suspects, including the most prominent journalists on trial, should remain in custody.

Those to remain in custody are commentator Kadri Gursel, investigative journalist Ahmet Sik, the paper's editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu and chief executive Akin Atalay.

The next hearing was set for September 11.


Read more: Press Freedom in Turkey

Those to be released were expected to walk free later from Silviri jail outside Istanbul after completing the prison formalities.

The staff are charged with supporting in their coverage three groups that Turkey considers terror groups – the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), the ultra-left Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C), and the movement of Fethullah Gulen, the US-based preacher who Ankara accuses of ordering last year's coup attempt.

Supporters say the paper has always taken a tough line against the three organisations and is merely being punished for being one of the few opposition voices in the Turkish media.

Many of the suspects, including Gursel and Sabuncu, have already spent over eight months behind bars.

If convicted, they face varying terms of up to 43 years in jail.

The trial comes as concern grows over press freedoms in Turkey under the state of emergency imposed after a failed military coup in July 2016.

According to the P24 press freedom group, there are 166 journalists behind bars in Turkey, most of them arrested under the state of emergency, to the alarm of Turkey's Western allies.