Turkey's fresh ban pushes social media giants to remove content
A recent court ruling seen by daily Hürriyet ordered authorities to block a total of 166 websites that published the controversial photos. Beside the world's largest social media websites in the list, there are also specific links to the stories published by Turkish newspapers.
The decision, signed by Bekir Altun, the judge at Istanbul’s 1st Criminal Court of Peace, was taken after Istanbul’s Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office’s Terror and Organized Crime Investigation Bureau demanded the ban on news and videos.
The decision stated content removal would be implemented and a possible blockage would be put in place if this was not done.
A number of Turkey's leading Internet service providers implemented the ban in the afternoon of April 6, an official confirmed after widespread complaints about access problems to the social media websites.
Speaking to daily Hürriyet, Internet Service Providers Union (ESB) Secretary General Bülent Kent stressed that "the procedure continues" as all service providers are expected to implement the ban immediately.
Tayfun Acarer, the head of the Information and Communications Technologies Authority (BTK), told daily Hürriyet that the ban on Facebook had been lifted after it rapidly complied with the court ruling on April 6.
YouTube.com ran the text of a court ruling on its site saying an "administration measure" had been implemented by the country's telecommunications authority (TIB).
Google said it was working to restore service to the YouTube video-sharing site, which it owns. Twitter also said it was working to restore access for its users.
In the evening hours, ESB Secretary General Kent announced that Twitter had also complied with the ruling and its service will return shortly. At 7 p.m., Kent said YouTube also removed the content that the court deemed illegal, which led to the revocation of the ban on all global social media platforms.
Wife, children of slain prosecutor 'upset' over photos
Two militants with alleged links to the outlawed far-left Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C) took Mehmet Selim Kiraz, the prosecutor in the controversial case of the killing of Gezi victim Berkin Elvan, hostage in Istanbul's Çağlayan Courthouse on March 31.
Kiraz succumbed to his injuries in hospital after the eight-hour hostage drama, during which security forces killed the two captors.
Presidential spokesman İbrahim Kalın said a prosecutor had demanded the block on access to the social media sites because some media organisations had acted "as if they were spreading terrorist propaganda" in sharing the images of the hostage-taking.
"This has to do with the publishing of the prosecutor's picture. What happened in the aftermath (of the prosecutor's killing) is as grim as the incident itself," Kalin said.
"The demand from the prosecutor's office is that this image not be used anywhere in electronic platforms," he told a news conference in Ankara.
"The wife and children of prosecutor Kiraz have been deeply upset. The images are everywhere," a senior Turkish official told Reuters. "A request has been made to both Twitter and YouTube for the removal of the images and posts but they have not accepted it and no response has been given. That's why this decision has been taken through a court in Istanbul."
Criminal investigations, witholding accreditation
On April 1, a total of 13 media organizations and journalists had their access banned for the press conference and the funeral ceremony of Kiraz at the Eyüp Sultan Mosque on April 1 for publishing photos showing Kiraz as a hostage.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu later announced that he gave the instruction to withhold accreditation.
Separately, a criminal investigation into seven Turkish newspapers for publishing the hostage photo was launched on April 2.
Daily Hürriyet, one of the targets of the accreditation ban and the investigation, rejected Davutoğlu's accusations in an editorial on April 3. "We just want to do journalism. We do not want to face bans with policemen waiting on street corners, trying to prevent our colleagues from doing their work," it said.
This is not the first time Turkey has blocked social media platforms. Twitter was banned March 20, 2014, some 20 hours after then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had vowed to “eradicate” the Twitter network during an election rally.
The Constitutional Court, which swiftly considered a number of individual applications filed following the blocking, unanimously ruled the ban was a violation of free speech guaranteed by Article 26 of the Constitution on April 3, 2014.
Meanwhile, as it happened with most of the previous bans, social media activity of Turks did not come to a halt due to bans.
In fact, with many people circumventing the blocking with technical tools, like VPN services, more than 3 million Turkish tweets were posted in the first two hours of the ban, as the hashtag #TwitterisblockedinTurkey trended globally, according to reports.