Skip to main content

Turkey bans media from Security Directorate buildings

The Interior Ministry decided to ban journalists from entering police premises across the nation at the height of the corruption and bribery scandal.

A plainclothes police officer reacts as riot police stand guard in front of the courthouse in Istanbul December 20, 2013. Turkish police arrested eight people in connection with allegations of official corruption and bribery, a newspaper said on Friday, in an investigation Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has called a "dirty operation" aimed at undermining his rule. REUTERS/Osman Orsal (TURKEY - Tags: POLITICS CRIME LAW) - RTX16PID
A plainclothes policeman reacts as riot police stand guard in front of the courthouse in Istanbul, Dec. 20, 2013. — REUTERS/Osman Orsal

In September, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) made it clear that the press freedom crisis is deepening in Turkey. “Heated anti-press rhetoric, the firing of leading journalists, threats to restrict online speech and a series of physical and legal assaults further damaged the press freedom environment in Turkey in the months following the Gezi Park protests that began last May,” the CPJ wrote.

That crisis is only getting worse now as the government is desperately trying to provide damage control for a corruption scandal involving three ministers’ sons and one minister.

Subscribe for unlimited access

All news, events, memos, reports, and analysis, and access all 10 of our newsletters. Learn more

$14 monthly or $100 annually ($8.33/month)
OR

Continue reading this article for free

All news, events, memos, reports, and analysis, and access all 10 of our newsletters. Learn more.

By signing up, you agree to Al-Monitor’s Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy. Already have an account? Log in