An independent Turkish broadcaster was pulled off the air yesterday over allegations of “spreading terrorist propaganda”, its general co-ordinator said, adding to fears of a government cracking down on the media.
Turkey’s satellite provider Turksat halted broadcasts of IMC TV at the request of an Ankara prosecutor investigating whether the channel supported a “terrorist” group, Eyup Burc said.
“In Turkey, everything contrary to the official view is tossed into the terrorism bag,” Burc told Reuters, denying any ties with terrorist networks. “This was clearly a political decision. The prosecutor has no legal right to seek our closure based on an allegation.”
No one was available at Turksat to comment.
The plug was pulled on IMC mid-broadcast during a live interview with Can Dundar and Erdem Gul, two prominent journalists who were freed pending trial earlier yesterday after spending 92 days in prison.
The two editors from the opposition newspaper Cumhuriyet still face lifetime prison sentences for the publication of video footage purporting to show the state intelligence agency helping send weapons to Syria.
“This was done deliberately, to send a message to the media: that Can Dundar and Erdem Gul may have been released due to the public outcry, but that doesn’t mean the government is retreating from its course,” Burc said.
Dundar and Gul were greeted upon their release from prison in the pre-dawn hours by friends and family, encountering emotional embraces as they took their first steps outside the state’s custody.
Dundar was speaking about press freedoms in the interview on IMC-TV when the feed was cut.
Last year, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pledged that Dundar and Gul would pay a “heavy price” for their reporting and was said to have been personally involved in the case against them.
There have been a string of prosecutions against journalists, politicians and ordinary citizens who have allegedly “insulted” the long serving Turkish leader.
Presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin lashed out yesterday against those who criticise Erdogan, saying that “they are making open terror propaganda, propaganda for a terror organisation”.
“When it comes to the fight against terrorism, then those who attack the Turkish Republic, especially our honorable president – no matter if they are politicians, columnists, rapporteurs or the chief editor of this or that newspaper – this doesn’t change the result,” Kalin told reporters in Ankara.
The European Union, engaged in delicate bargaining with Turkey in which it is offering the prospect of EU membership in return for Turkish help in stemming the flow of irregular migrants to Europe, had welcomed the journalists’ release.
In a statement, the EU said that the liberation of Dundar and Gul was a necessary step and called for the dropping of all charges against them.
Istanbul-based IMC devotes much of its coverage to the Kurdish conflict, in which hundreds of civilians, militants and members of the security force have been killed since clashes erupted in July, wrecking a 2-1/2-year ceasefire in a three-decade insurgency.
It also covers other social issues, such as environmental protests, or speeches by opposition politicians that other media are loath to carry.
Burc said IMC would continue its programming on its website while seeking legal recourse to resuming its broadcasts.
Turkish authorities last year took over newspapers and television channels affiliated with a religious movement led by US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, Erdogan’s former ally until police linked with Gulen leaked a corruption probe into the then-prime minister’s family and close circle.
Gulen has been charged over alleged “terrorist” activities.


Related Story