Seriously, who imprisoned journalists in Turkey?


Now I more often think that foreigners know very little about Turkey. They are so reluctant to learn more, yet they can't stop themselves from writing assertive pieces.Last week The New York Times Editorial Board strongly advised Twitter to refrain from cooperating with the Erdoğan government, saying it persecutes critics and political opponents.I think the board members should spend some of their spare time to learn about Turkey and see that even the journalists who posted tweets threatening Prime Minister Erdoğan with execution continue their lives outsides bars.Citing the Committee to Protect Journalists' report, the board says that Turkey is the "world's top press jailer" imprisoning 40 journalists as of Dec. 1, 2013. But as of April, 2014, there are 15, seven of whom are sentenced.I don't know if being a member of an outlawed organization such as the Revolutionary People's Liberation Front (DHKP-C) – which they may remember claimed responsibility for the attack targeting the U.S. Embassy in Ankara in February 2013 – is a journalistic activity for The New York Times, as charges against members of the group mostly concern bombings, using explosives, murder, et cetera. But at least journalists covering Turkey for the paper can be contacted for accurate numbers. Or Yavuz Baydar, who wrote an Op-Ed for The New York Times last summer about the current situation of the imprisoned journalists, could be consulted. Maybe they could ask what changed in the two years since he defended the trials against the journalists in the Dec. 13, 2011 issue of Huffington Post. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yavuz-baydar/imprisoned-journalists-turkey_b_1141650.html)Maybe they could email famous journalist Cengiz Candar and ask what changed his opinion. In March 2011, he stood up for the arrest of journalists working for Oda TV while at The Guardian and said they were not arrested because of their journalistic activities. (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/mar/28/turkey-freedom-speech-turkish-government)Is it me or is it actually interesting that those who chose to side with Fethullah Gülen during the Erdoğan-Gülen showdown also changed their positions on press freedom in Turkey. They were defending the trials when there were over 70 imprisoned journalists and now they are criticizing Erdoğantarget="_blank"'>