Aratta-Kingdom Posted March 10, 2010 Report Share Posted March 10, 2010 http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/kni/lowres/knin120l.jpg http://www.mediawatchwatch.org.uk/wp-images/turkdog.jpg http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/kni/lowres/knin351l.jpg http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/kni/lowres/knin328l.jpg http://iranpoliticsclub.net/cartoons/steph-bergol2/images/51%20European%20Constitution.jpeg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aratta-Kingdom Posted March 10, 2010 Author Report Share Posted March 10, 2010 GOOD BOY http://www.mediawatchwatch.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/tayyip_erdogan.jpg http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/sge/lowres/sgen208l.jpg http://nobodysbusiness.typepad.com/nobodys_business/images/erdogan_pussy.jpg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yervant1 Posted March 10, 2010 Report Share Posted March 10, 2010 ARTIST DEFIANT DESPITE FINE FOR TURKISH PM 'MOCKERY'By Jonathan Head BBC NEWShttp://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/uk/8558805.stm2010/03/09 21:15:45 GMT A British artist whose collage was found to have mocked Turkey'sprime minister has been fined by a court in Istanbul. Michael Dickinson walked smiling from the Kadikoy district court,a free man, but not completely off the hook. The judge ruled that the British artist had crossed the line withhis cartoon, superimposing the head of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoganon the body of a dog, and found him guilty of insulting Mr Erdogan's"dignity and honour". The judge sentenced him to 425 days in prison, the first time anyonehas been jailed for criticising the prime minister. But the sentence was immediately commuted to a fine of about £3,000. When a defiant Mr Dickinson insisted he would not pay, the judgeexplained that, provided he made no new cartoons of the prime ministerover the next five years, the fine would be put aside. "Of course I'm relieved", he told the BBC outside the court. "I didn't know what to expect. But I still don't think I should havebeen guilty, and I'm not saying I'm not going to make any more cartoonsof politicians." It has been quite a legal saga for the 59-year-old teacher, writer,anti-war activist and founder of the Istanbul branch of the Stuckistart movement. 'Best in Show' He was originally charged under the draconian article 125 of theTurkish criminal code in June 2006, after exhibiting a collage titled"Best in Show". It showed George W Bush leaning over and tying a bow around the neckof a dog with Mr Erdogan's head on it, as a critique of Turkey'salliance with the United States. " At least in Britain I could make satirical pictures of GordonBrown and not go to jail " Michael Dickinson The case against MrDickinson, originally from County Durham, was dropped, but outsidecourt he displayed a similar cartoon to journalists, in protest hesaid against the prosecution of his Turkish colleagues. When that case finally came to court in September 2008 he was acquitted- but the verdict was overthrown on appeal by a state prosecutor. The prosecutor insisted the crime was so serious that Mr Dickinsonmust do time in prison. The judge seems to have found a way out of the potentially embarrassingscenario of a foreign artist being put behind bars for offending theprime minister. Nevertheless the case will ring alarm bells with human rights groupsdocumenting what they say are multiple attacks on freedom of expressionin Turkey. Some originate with the famously thin-skinned prime minister himself. Michael Dickinson is not the first cartoonist, for example, to besued for depicting Mr Erdogan as an animal. One notable edition of the satirical magazine Penguen in 2005 had himrepresented as no fewer than nine animals - that case was thrown outby the judge, but Mr Erdogan has won thousands of pounds in damagesover the years. 'I like it here' But journalists and writers often face far more serious charges. One article in the criminal code - the infamous "301" on insulting"Turkishness" - has been used to prosecute award-winning novelistsOrhan Pamuk and Elif Safak, and Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,who was murdered by a Turkish nationalist in 2007. Powerful prosecutors are prepared to go after any journalist deemedto be sympathetic to terrorist groups. Last month a Kurdish journalist was jailed for 21 years because hispaper used a respectful term of address when describing the jailedKurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan. Another Kurdish journalist is facing up to 525 years in prison onsimilar charges. Also last month, the editor of a well-known newspaper website wasfreed after spending 10 months in prison, suspected only because shehad met the leader of an extreme left-wing group. By those standards Michael Dickinson can count himself lucky. So what are his plans now? He went back to the UK last year, after24 years in Turkey, but says he did not like his native country much. "I like it here, I like the food, the people, the weather", he said. "But at least in Britain I could make satirical pictures of GordonBrown and not go to jail." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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