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Turkey’s Erdoğan threatens to sue Times for publishing critical letter | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan addresses foreign ambassadors after a traditional iftar, the meal to break Ramadan in Ankara, on July 18. 2013. (AFP/Adem Altan)


Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan addresses foreign ambassadors after a traditional iftar, the meal to break Ramadan in Ankara, on July 18. 2013.  (AFP/Adem Altan)

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan addresses foreign ambassadors after a traditional iftar, the meal to break Ramadan in Ankara, on July 18. 2013. (AFP/Adem Altan)

Istanbul, Reuters—Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan on Friday threatened to sue the Times of London for publishing an open letter by a group of celebrities, academics and others criticizing his handling of anti-government protests.

Sean Penn, Susan Sarandon, and Ben Kingsley were among those who signed the letter that accused Erdoğan’s government this week of “dictatorial rule” and of causing the deaths of five protesters who died after clashes with police.

“The press wants to throw mud to see if it sticks. The Times is renting out its own pages for money,” Erdoğan told reporters in comments broadcast live by NTV channel. “This is the Times‘ failing. We will pursue legal channels regarding the Times.”

Protesters demanded Erdoğan resign as they staged the country’s fiercest anti-government demonstrations in decades in Istanbul, Ankara and other major cities beginning in late May.

Many accused Erdoğan of adopting an authoritarian tilt or greater religious conservatism after his Islamist-rooted AK Party won the last three elections, increasing its share of the vote each time.

Erdoğan has dismissed the protesters as “looters” and “terrorists” and accused foreign governments and media outlets of stoking the civil disturbances.

Erdoğan said the signatories of the letter, taken out as an full-page advertisement in the Times, had “rented out their thoughts” and did not genuinely support democracy.

“If they truly believed in democracy, they couldn’t have displayed such a lack of character to call the leader of a party that won 50 percent of the vote a dictator,” Erdoğan said.

The letter also accused Erdoğan of undermining the principles of a free press for jailing dozens of journalists in recent years.

The Times had no immediate comment on Erdoğan’s remarks.