Last Updated: Wednesday, 31 May 2023, 15:44 GMT

Journalists Imprisoned in 2017 - Ayşenur Parıldak

Publisher Committee to Protect Journalists
Publication Date 31 December 2017
Cite as Committee to Protect Journalists, Journalists Imprisoned in 2017 - Ayşenur Parıldak, 31 December 2017, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/5a5c943840a.html [accessed 5 June 2023]
DisclaimerThis is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States.

Zaman | Imprisoned in Turkey | August 01, 2016

Job:Internet Reporter, Print reporter
Medium:Internet, Print
Beats Covered:Crime
Gender:Female
Local or Foreign:Local
Freelance:No
Charge:Anti-state
Length of Sentence:5 years to <10 years
Reported Health Problems:No

A court in Ankara on August 11, 2016, ordered Ayşenur Parıldak, a former court reporter based in the city for the shuttered daily Zaman, jailed pending trial, according to the state-run Anadolu Agency (AA). In December 2016, prosecutors asked a court to indict Parıldak on the charge of "being a member of a [terrorist] organization."

News reports differed as to the date police detained the journalist. The pro-government news website En Son Haber reported that police detained Parıldak on August 6, 2016. The pro-opposition daily Cumhuriyet reported the date as August 3.

Parıldak's lawyer told CPJ he would email copies of the court documents from the journalist's case, but as of late 2017, CPJ had not received them.

An Ankara court on November 22 sentenced Parıldak to seven years and six months in prison for "being a member of an armed terrorist organization," the online newspaper Diken reported.

"My only crime is having worked at the Zaman newspaper. I wish I hadn't," she said during the hearing. The journalist has appealed the verdict, according to reports.

In a letter that Parıldak sent to Cumhuriyet from prison, which the newspaper published on October 4, 2016, Parıldak said that police questioned her about her employment at Zaman, and about her activity on Twitter. Parıldak said she had been unemployed since government-appointed trustees took control of Zaman. She added that police told her that an informant warned them that she planned to escape the country

A March 2016 court order placed the Feza Media Group, which owned Zaman and several other media outlets, under the trusteeship of figures appointed by the government on the grounds that it was linked to followers of exiled preacher Fethullah Gülen. The government accuses Gülen of maintaining a terrorist organization and parallel state structure within Turkey that it blames for orchestrating a failed military coup attempt on July 15, 2016. The government used emergency powers it assumed after that coup attempt to order Zaman closed by government decree, and CPJ research shows that police have charged other Zaman journalists with terrorism-related offenses because of their work for the newspaper, which the government considered a mouthpiece for the Gülenist network.

In her letter to Cumhuriyet, Parıldak alleged that jailors beat and sexually harassed her and other female inmates. "I was questioned for eight days, day and night. [The police] were drunk as they were questioning me, and they were not afraid to say so openly," she wrote.

Parıldak said she had spent 20 days sharing a cell with other prisoners, before being moved to a smaller cell. "It means solitary confinement," she wrote. "I fear I will be forgotten here."

According to an October 6, 2016, En Son Haber report, the Justice Ministry denied the journalist's claims. The ministry told En Son Haber that the journalist was in a cell with two other inmates, and that she had not been beaten or harassed.

A court on May 2, 2016 ordered Parıldak to be released during the trial but the order was overturned when prosecutors presented more evidence to the court based on the journalist's phone records, according to reports.

At a hearing on October 10, 2017, Parıldak said that one of the phone lines cited in the evidence was a business phone provided to her by Zaman. The court sent memos to the police, the telecommunications department and the Ankara Prosecutor's Office after the hearing, demanding more data on her mobile phone use and her alleged use of the Bylock app, according to news reports. Authorities claim that members of the Gülen network used the app in an attempt to communicate securely.

Parıldak denied that she had the Bylock app or that she wrote some of the tweets cited in her case, according to news reports.

En Son Haber reported that Parıldak was at Ankara Women's Prison.

Copyright notice: © Committee to Protect Journalists. All rights reserved. Articles may be reproduced only with permission from CPJ.

Search Refworld

Countries