Take Action for Zehra Doğan

Update - 25 February 2019

Artist and journalist, Zehra Doğan, was released yesterday from Tarsus prison in Mersin, Turkey, after serving over five hundred days behind bars. Doğan was given a prison sentence of two years, nine months and 22 days on a charge of ‘propagandising for a terrorist organisation’ for her work as a painter and journalist. Doğan should never have spent a day in prison.

While we welcome her release, her imprisonment is a stark reminder of the difficult situation for free expression in Turkey, and the hefty price those who criticise the authorities are forced to pay.

PEN International reiterates its call to the Turkish authorities to end their crackdown on freedom of expression and release all those imprisoned for their peaceful exercise of this fundamental right.

Update - 31 October 2018

Zehra Doğan was transferred to Tarsus prison in the province of Mersin in October 2018, reportedly due to overcrowding. Please keep sending messages of support to:

Zehra Doğan C-3

Tarsus Kadın Kapalı CİK

Alifakı Mahallesi Alifakı sokak

Tarsus – MERSİN

TURKEY

We do not know whether the prison administration will accept messages in languages other than Turkish. Please find a model letter below:

‘Zehra, yalnız değilsin. Emeğinle gurur duyuyor, cesaretini kutluyoruz. Sesinin dünyada duyulduğunu bilmeni istiyoruz. Özgürlüğün için mücadele vermeyi sürdüreceğiz.’

(Zehra you are not alone. We are proud of your work and celebrate your courage. Your voice is heard around the world and we will keep advocating for your freedom.)

Day of the Imprisoned Writer
Zehra Doğan - Journalist, painter, poet

Zehra Doğan is serving a prison sentence of 2 year, 9 months and 22 days. On 24 March 2017, she was convicted of ‘propagandising for a terrorist organisation’ (Article 7/2 of the Anti-Terror Law) by the Second High Criminal Court of Mardin province, for her work as a painter and journalist. PEN International considers her imprisonment a violation of her right to freedom of expression as an artist and a journalist, and calls for her immediate and unconditional release.

In a letter to family member in October 2017, Doğan wrote:

‘When they were coming to a verdict on my work exposing the destruction in Nusaybin, they asked "Did you create this picture?" and I replied "No, you did" and was arrested. During my previous detention, I had commented "They imprisoned me for my writings and drawings but I still have my brush and pen”. This time round they're not giving me my brush. But to provoke or prevent me from producing my art is nobody's business. I learned within these walls to mix drawing colours from food and drink - I continue to paint and write. A person’s imagination expands when imprisoned. I paint the women here and write about their stories. You can imprison an artist but you can't stop her productivity.’

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