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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 2, 2018
Turkish breakfast TV: Hate speech, death threats... and the weather
TV
station under fire from all sides after early morning presenters rant
about killing secularists and death sentences for journalists

Ahmet Keser launches a tirade on 'The Day Begins' (screengrab)
ISTANBUL, Turkey – Plenty
of tea was spluttered and breadcrumbs spat as the presenter of a
Turkish breakfast programme decided to launch a tirade on air and issue
death threats to residents of certain areas of Istanbul.
Viewers of the ultra-religious Akit station's "The Day Begins" programme
watched as Ahmet Keser seethed with anger at claims Turkey was harming
civilians in Syria's Afrin region - before stating that, should
likeminded Turks wish, they would start with "traitors" in secular areas
of Istanbul - and even some members of parliament.
If we were to kill civilians we would start in Cihangir, Nisantasi, Etiler, there are so many traitors- Ahmet Keser, presenter, The Day Begins
"Why would the military of the Turkish republic go there to kill
civilians?" he said, adding: "If we were to kill civilians we would
start in Cihangir, Nisantasi, Etiler, there are so many traitors."
He ended the tirade with a veiled threat to MPs: "There is the parliament."
Keser also referred to the residents of Cihangir, Nisantasi and Etiler -
considered westernised areas of Istanbul - as "mercenaries".
The backlash from the public and opposition political parties against his comments was immediate and widespread.
Baris Yarkadas, an MP from the opposition CHP Party, filed a complaint in parliament asking the speaker to initiate action.
The recently launched centre-right Good party filed criminal charges. It
was not clear if the charges were against Keser, the media group, or
both.
On Tuesday evening, the Kucukcekmece prosecutor's office charged Keser
with "using the media to incite public hatred and to denigrate".
It is a clear act of sabotage against Turkey's unity- Mahir Unal, AKP spokesman
On 28 February, Mahir Unal, the spokesman of the ruling AKP party, whose
views the Akit TV says it reflects, also lashed out at those remarks.
"You are using such expressions based on what? We will never accept or
endorse this... It is a clear act of sabotage against Turkey's unity,"
Unal said in televised remarks.
Unal went on to say that he believed the television station had taken action against the person involved.
Akit TV said in a statement that Keser had resigned in order to prevent
attacks on the institution using his remarks as a pretext.
But presenters on Akit have on multiple occasions called the secular Turkish republic a stain on the country's history.
Just two weeks ago, another presenter on the same breakfast programme
threatened the secular Cumhuriyet newspaper during a segment showing the
front pages of the day's papers.
Taking offence at every aspect of the paper's front page and calling its
employees "filth", the presenter, whose on screen physical agitation
grows with every sentence, expressed a desire for one-man rule, sharia
law and the death sentence in order to better deal with Cumhuriyet and
its staff.
Akit's threats have enraged journalist unions and bodies, while also
increasing concerns about the ever-deepening polarisation in society,
which targeted groups say is encouraged by the AKP divisive rhetoric of
recent years.
Can Guleryuzlu, the president of the Progressive Journalists
Association, told Middle East Eye that Akit's work cannot be termed
journalism - it is is criminality fuelled by political motives.
"Akit TV is engaging in warmongering and the incitement of hate crime under the guise of journalism," he said.
"Two weeks ago it used similar hate speech to depict the Cumhuriyet
newspaper as a target and that is a criminal act. This shows that the
institution in question is systematically engaged in such crimes and
will continue to do so.
"We know that Akit TV is very close to the AKP ruling party in terms of
thought and draws its courage to do such things from those in political
power," said Guleryuzlu.
Ozan Asik, a sociologist at Uludag University, told MEE such incidents
in the media reflected the wider social climate where people see threats
in all directions.
"Polarisation in society is at such a high that it has reached
existential angst levels for everyone. All differing views are seen as
existential threats," said Asik. "It is the same thing we are seeing in
media as well."
Asik said in the case of the Akit group, a large section of
conservatives rejected its views as well, deeming it too radical and
imbalanced.
Political influence and union inefficiency
Turkish media watchdog RTUK is the body that deals with infringements
committed by media. However, many say the structure of the body is too
politicised, preventing it from acting on issue with political import.
RTUK's membership is based on proportional representation of political
parties in parliament. This gives the AKP clout over the body.
The watchdog on Tuesday evening also announced it had placed a
three-episode ban on the programme and imposed a financial penalty on
Akit TV.
Concerns that the judicial system is also increasingly vulnerable to
political pressure also raises fears that such acts go unpunished.
"If prosecutors and other public institutions don't take immediate steps
then they will not have performed their duty and will be complicit in
the crime," said Guleryuzlu.
He spoke to MEE before the district prosecutor's office later in the evening announced an investigation into Akit TV.
If prosecutors and other public institutions don't take immediate steps then they will not have performed their duty and will be complicit in the crime- Can Guleryuzlu, president of Progressive Journalists Association
Journalist unions and associations in Turkey have no means of acting against or censuring improper journalistic practices.
Most of Turkish media is owned by corporations or individuals with varied business interests.
According to Asik, whose research specialises in Turkish media,
journalists themselves are to blame for their inability to efficiently
organise in the face of corporate owners.
He said the failure of journalists to organise properly began soon after
the era of liberalisation and deregulation began, and that it was an
issue not just in Turkey but across the globe.
"Journalists themselves are to some extent responsible for the weak
position of Turkish media in its relationship to corporate owners and
the political regimes because they did not organise, establish
efficient trade unions to defend their professional rights, and form a
united front against corporate owners and the government over the last
two decades," said Asik.
"And remember that at the time it was a coalition government with various points of contact."
Despite their limitations, Guleryuzlu said they remained dedicated to calling out unacceptable journalism practices.
"As press trade associations we will always say that such an
understanding [like Yeni Akit's] has nothing to do with journalism and
will condemn it," he said.
"Journalism is not only under pressure from public authorities but from
such politically motivated acts that have no place within journalistic
principles."
"We will continue to use every platform to say that Akit TV is engaged in warmongering and hate crime."

