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Canadian arrested in Turkey for 'insulting' president on social media: lawyer

Canadian jailed in Turkey over Facebook post
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A Canadian woman has been arrested in Turkey for allegedly insulting the country's president in comments posted on Facebook, her Turkish lawyer said Thursday.

Ece Heper, 50, was arrested in the city of Kars in northeastern Turkey, and charged on Dec. 30, Sertac Celikkaleli told The Canadian Press.

Heper, a dual Canadian-Turkish citizen, had been in the country since mid-November, according to her friends.

"She is intense and opinionated, for sure," Birgitta Pavic said from her Toronto home. "But everything is intense over there right now, especially criticizing the government."

At issue, her friends and lawyer said, are several recent Facebook posts about President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

In one posted on Dec. 28, Heper accused Erdogan of jailing journalists who suggest there is evidence Turkey is supporting the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, known as ISIS or ISIL.

Global Affairs Canada said they are aware of a Canadian citizen detained in Turkey and are providing consular assistance, but wouldn't divulge further information, citing privacy laws.

Heper has a log home in Norwood, Ont., about 150 kilometres northeast of Toronto, Pavic said, where she lives with five dogs she rescued from Turkey "that are like her children." 

Her parents are dead and she is estranged from her brother, Pavic said, so her friends are taking up the cause to help her out.

Pavic said Heper has "some health issues" and her friends are worried about her access to medications while in detention.

Those found guilty of insulting the president face up to three years in prison, Celikkaleli said. The charges have become quite common throughout the country, the lawyer said through translation.

"Freedom of speech is a huge problem in Turkey," said another friend, Emrah Bayram. "But it's just nonsense, this insulting the president business."

Heper had been spending more time in Turkey over the past year, her friends said, after befriending a man in southern Turkey, near the Syrian border. She told friends the man had been in exile and living in a Kurdish region in Syria's north.

"She has a real interest about the problems Kurdish people face in the country," said Bayram, a Turkish citizen who lives in Seattle.

Pavic said Heper told her the man came back to Turkey and was arrested and jailed in September 芒鈧 purportedly for a link to the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, a group listed as a terrorist organization in Turkey.

Heper's friends said she was living in Mardin, a city in southeastern Turkey, but travelled to Kars to get the man's wife and bring her to visit him in jail. She was arrested in the woman's home around 10 a.m., her friends said.

Celikkaleli said it could be months before Heper goes on trial.

Freedom of expression has become a major issue in Turkey under Erdogan. Last year, a court convicted a former Miss Turkey winner for insulting Erdogan in social media posts.

Since becoming president in 2014, Erdogan has filed about 2,000 defamation cases under a previously seldom-used law that bars insulting the president. Free speech advocates say the law is being used aggressively to silence and intimidate critics.

Liam Casey, The Canadian Press





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