Turkey’s new legal amendments a threat to free speech amid looming elections

Turkey’s parliament, on October 13, 2022, has passed a series of new amendments known as the censorship law. The new legal amendments now introduce new abusive criminal speech offences, further deepening country’s online censorship and restricting the access to information. This was stressed by the global human rights watchdog, Human Rights Watch, raising concerns over under attack free speech of people of Turkey as the elections loom.

The timing of the new legislation, that comes in months before 2023 presidential and parliamentary elections, has also raised concerns over attempts by the Turkish government to try to curb and silence the online reporting and commentary.

“Taken together, the new legislation represents a draconian new chapter ahead of elections in 2023 by increasing the weapons in the government’s arsenal to enforce censorship and tighten control over social media and independent online news sites,” said Sarah Clarke, Head of Europe and Central Asia at ARTICLE 19, “With severe penalties against tech companies for failure to comply with user data and content take-down requests, the law will force tech companies to be complicit with an almost total censorship regime.”

Keep Reading

The new legislation passed in Turkish parliament consists of 40 articles that amend several laws, including the country’s Internet Law, the Press Law, and the Turkish Penal Code. It makes “disseminating false information a criminal offense with prison sentences of between one to three years”. The laws grant much firmer control to government over the online news websites. It equips the government controlled Information and Communication Technologies Authority (Bilgi Teknolojileri ve İletişim Kurumu, BTK) with elaborate powers to “compel social media companies to comply with requests to take down online content and hand over user data or to be subject to reduction of their bandwidth” – known as “internet throttling” – if they don’t comply, as mentioned by The Human Rights Watch.

“The new law tightens the Turkish government’s control over social media by subjecting tech companies like Twitter and Facebook to enormous pressure to comply with government censorship and criminal probes into users,” said Emma Sinclair-Webb, Europe and Central Asia associate director at Human Rights Watch. “With severe penalties against tech companies for noncompliance, the law effectively blackmails tech companies into abusing human rights to avoid becoming inaccessible platforms.”

Desk Writer

Human stories, politics, diplomatic developments, climate and daily updates – all are assured to be at your access as we strive to bring the best news to you.

Recent Posts

Ramaswamy and Musk Team Up to Slash Federal Bureaucracy

Indian-origin entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and Tesla’s Elon Musk are leading a new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to “take a… Read More

November 16, 2024

From Abraham Accords to AI: UAE’s Path to Global Peace and Innovation

The Gulf nation United Arab Emirates is always committed to the peace and harmony on the globe. The nation celebrates… Read More

November 16, 2024

The Best Boroughs for Affordable Rent in London You Didn’t Expect

Recent research from Trust for London reveals the most affordable areas in London for renting a one-bedroom property. According to… Read More

November 15, 2024

Could We Travel the World in 60 Minutes? Elon Musk’s Vision for Earth-to-Earth Flights

Imagine traveling from Delhi to San Francisco—or from Tokyo to Delhi—in less than an hour. Elon Musk is working on… Read More

November 15, 2024

Redefining Global Technology and Innovation: The Rise of UAE

The United Arab Emirates has become a global hub for technology, bringing together big names like Microsoft and IBM. It… Read More

November 15, 2024

Trump Team Faces Turmoil Over Allegation Against Defense Nominee

Team of President Donald Trump was announcing new Cabinet picks this week when a sexual assault allegation came up against… Read More

November 15, 2024

This website uses cookies.

Read More