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Friday, November 12, 2010

Most Turks unaware of truth about Mavi Marmara

You thought Turkey was a relatively free country didn't you? According to this report by Michael Totten, the Turkish media is controlled tightly enough that most Turks are living a lie regarding what happened on the Mavi Marmara last May.
Claire Berlinski’s must-read article in the September issue of Standpoint describes how the overwhelming majority of Turks have no idea what really happened earlier this year aboard the Turkish Mavi Marmara vessel, where an Israeli boarding party enforcing the blockade of Gaza was ambushed in a premeditated attack with knives and iron bars.

She canvassed Istanbul — where she lives — with a Turkish documentary filmmaker and interviewed a number of local people about that now-notorious incident. None knew the Israelis acted in self-defense when they shot their attackers.

“The men and women to whom we spoke,” she wrote, “were astonished when we told them that Israeli officials had invited the ship to disembark at Ashdod and deliver the aid overland. But they were not disbelieving — and importantly, when we told them this, it changed their view. Many spontaneously said that they knew they could not trust what they heard in the news, that the situation confused them and that something about the story just didn’t sound right.”

Unfortunately, few Turks will ever know what really happened that night. The Turkish media reported a grossly distorted version of the events, describing the attackers as “activists” and the Israelis who fought back as murderers. Most Turks can’t read or speak foreign languages and are therefore unable to learn the truth from newspapers abroad.
This video that I showed you earlier in the week is the trailer for a movie that is likely to convince more Turks that their government's narrative is correct. And this in a country that was once a candidate for EU membership.

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1 Comments:

At 2:59 PM, Blogger Sunlight said...

Claire is a treasure. I heard her talking about this Turkish control of the message in an interview podcast a few months back. I hope if she ends up moving from Turkey later that she'll work out of Israel. Her work is excellent.

 

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