Günlük

Günlük (Daily) was a Turkish newspaper known for its writing about Kurdish issues. It was published from 2009 to 2011. It was repeatedly closed for a period of one month in 2009 under court order, because of material deemed "terrorist propaganda" under Turkey's Press Law. One case related to an article by Amir Hassanpour, "Linguistic Rights in the Linguistic Systems of the Developed World: State, Market and Communication Technologies," which included a passing mention of the PKK. The monthly periodical Vesta had published the same article in 2003 without sanction. The paper's executive editors were Ayhan Bilgen and Filiz Koçali; charges against the former were dropped, while the latter was acquitted. In 2013 the ECHR awarded damages for the suspensions, judging a violation of Article 10 of

Günlük

Günlük (Daily) was a Turkish newspaper known for its writing about Kurdish issues. It was published from 2009 to 2011. It was repeatedly closed for a period of one month in 2009 under court order, because of material deemed "terrorist propaganda" under Turkey's Press Law. One case related to an article by Amir Hassanpour, "Linguistic Rights in the Linguistic Systems of the Developed World: State, Market and Communication Technologies," which included a passing mention of the PKK. The monthly periodical Vesta had published the same article in 2003 without sanction. The paper's executive editors were Ayhan Bilgen and Filiz Koçali; charges against the former were dropped, while the latter was acquitted. In 2013 the ECHR awarded damages for the suspensions, judging a violation of Article 10 of