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German TV journalist refused entry to Turkey, detained in Istanbul airport | German TV journalist refused entry to Turkey, detained in Istanbul airport |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A TV journalist for German broadcaster ARD, who was going to the Turkish-Syrian border to report on refugees, spent six hours detained in the Istanbul airport after having been refused entry into Turkey. | A TV journalist for German broadcaster ARD, who was going to the Turkish-Syrian border to report on refugees, spent six hours detained in the Istanbul airport after having been refused entry into Turkey. |
“Denied entry into Turkey. There's a note against my name. I'm a journalist. Problem?” Volker Schwenck, the chief of ARD's Cairo bureau, wrote on Twitter. | “Denied entry into Turkey. There's a note against my name. I'm a journalist. Problem?” Volker Schwenck, the chief of ARD's Cairo bureau, wrote on Twitter. |
Turkish authorities haven’t yet given any explanations to the journalist, ARD Tagesschau news service reported. | Turkish authorities haven’t yet given any explanations to the journalist, ARD Tagesschau news service reported. |
The journalist was planning to travel to the Syrian-Turkish border to speak with Syrian refugees who are fleeing their country to escape Islamic State atrocities. | The journalist was planning to travel to the Syrian-Turkish border to speak with Syrian refugees who are fleeing their country to escape Islamic State atrocities. |
READ MORE: Germany grants Turkish request to allow for possible prosecution of comedian who joked about Erdogan | READ MORE: Germany grants Turkish request to allow for possible prosecution of comedian who joked about Erdogan |
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has voiced concern with Turkey's refusal to allow Schwenck into the country. | |
"We immediately made sure to get into the swing of things…we are monitoring this with certain concern," Merkel said, as quoted by Sputnik. | |
She added that the German Foreign Office is in contact with "specialized agencies, and is making efforts to restore the journalist’s working capabilities." | |
Schwenck is not the first German journalist who has been refused entry by Turkey. In March a correspondent for the influential German magazine Der Spiegel, Hasnain Kazim, was forced to leave the country by Turkish authorities after his press credentials weren’t renewed. The magazine’s editor-in-chief accused Turkey of violating press freedom. | Schwenck is not the first German journalist who has been refused entry by Turkey. In March a correspondent for the influential German magazine Der Spiegel, Hasnain Kazim, was forced to leave the country by Turkish authorities after his press credentials weren’t renewed. The magazine’s editor-in-chief accused Turkey of violating press freedom. |
READ MORE: Turkey denies press accreditation to Der Spiegel correspondent | READ MORE: Turkey denies press accreditation to Der Spiegel correspondent |
In March, employees of Turkey's Zaman newspaper said they felt “like captives” following the government's takeover of the daily. Since the paper's seizure, it has turned into a government mouthpiece, with the first edition under the new ownership immediately featuring a picture of Erdogan. | In March, employees of Turkey's Zaman newspaper said they felt “like captives” following the government's takeover of the daily. Since the paper's seizure, it has turned into a government mouthpiece, with the first edition under the new ownership immediately featuring a picture of Erdogan. |
Meanwhile, two journalists from Turkey's Cumhuriyet newspaper are being charged with espionage after publishing a report in 2014 which purported to show Turkey's state intelligence agency helping to transfer weapons into Syria by truck. | Meanwhile, two journalists from Turkey's Cumhuriyet newspaper are being charged with espionage after publishing a report in 2014 which purported to show Turkey's state intelligence agency helping to transfer weapons into Syria by truck. |
The two spent 92 days in jail, almost half of it in solitary confinement, before the Constitutional Court ruled in February that their pre-trial detention was a violation of their rights. | The two spent 92 days in jail, almost half of it in solitary confinement, before the Constitutional Court ruled in February that their pre-trial detention was a violation of their rights. |
In April, a Turkish district court approved a government order to block internet access in the country to the website of the Russian news agency Sputnik. It also passed a similar ruling concerning another news agency, Dicle. | In April, a Turkish district court approved a government order to block internet access in the country to the website of the Russian news agency Sputnik. It also passed a similar ruling concerning another news agency, Dicle. |
Turkey's Golbasi District Court agreed with the government's assumption that the two agencies along with a number of Twitter users were posing a threat to Turkey's national security and promoting violence and crime, the Anadolu news agency reported. | Turkey's Golbasi District Court agreed with the government's assumption that the two agencies along with a number of Twitter users were posing a threat to Turkey's national security and promoting violence and crime, the Anadolu news agency reported. |
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