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Banished Erdogan critics find new home at opposition paper

The Sozcu daily, a relative newcomer in the Turkish press, has climbed to the top of the circulation ladder, taking on board senior journalists dumped from other papers for criticizing the government.
A woman reads a newspaper at a cafe, with an opposition newspaper carrying an upside down picture of Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on the window, in the Aegean coastal town of Cesme, western Turkey July 14, 2014. As families splash in the sea and lounge in the sun, thoughts of politics and civic duty are a world away for most Turks holidaying on the Aegean and Mediterranean coasts. Only the most committed opponents of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan leave the beach to queue in a sweltering council bui
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Over the past several years, the top columnists of Turkey’s Hurriyet daily, long recognized as the "flagship" of the Turkish press, have been sacrificed to government pressure. Two of those heavyweights — Emin Colasan and Bekir Coskun — have been recruited by Sozcu, a relative newcomer in the Turkish media, and will soon be joined by Yilmaz Ozdil, Hurriyet’s latest fallen star.

These seasoned columnists did not limit their government-bashing to Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP), but as the AKP grew stronger, its tolerance for criticism thinned. Moving to re-design the media, the government unleashed tax inspectors on Aydin Dogan, Hurriyet’s boss, subduing him with gigantic fines. Unlike a few other bosses, Dogan did not whine and beg for mercy. But after each election Erdogan won, he sacrificed a couple of columnists, forcing them to resign, either through censorship or “compulsory vacations.”

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