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Turkey once again blocks access to YouTube

Turkey once 
again blocks 	
access to YouTube - A Turkish court has once again blocked access to the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube, and reports on Sunday suggested the ban was a response to clips that allegedly insult Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the country’s founding father.
A Turkish court has once again blocked access to the popular video-sharing Web site YouTube, and reports on Sunday suggested the ban was a response to clips that allegedly insult Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the country’s founding father.

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Users trying to access the site from Turkey were met with notices in English and Turkish saying access to the Web site was banned under an Ankara court’s order. The notices said the court order was issued Jan. 17. In March, another Turkish court blocked access to YouTube, which is owned by California-based Google Inc., for two days after a complaint that some clips on the site insulted Atatürk, a war hero who founded Turkey from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire. The ban was lifted after YouTube removed the offending videos. The current ban was also imposed because of videos that were allegedly disrespectful of Atatürk.

    It is illegal in Turkey to insult Atatürk, a revered figure whose portrait still hangs in nearly all government offices almost 70 years since his death in 1938. It was not clear how long the current ban would last. The state-run Anatolia news agency said YouTube officials issued a statement saying the company hoped access would be re-established quickly. The YouTube bans in Turkey have highlighted the country’s troubled record on free expression. Several prominent Turkish journalists and writers, including winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature Orhan Pamuk, have been tried for allegedly insulting “Turkishness.”

22 January 2008, Tuesday

AP  ANKARA

   

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