IT
  
Attualmente si sta visualizzando la versione Italy del sito.
Volete passare al vostro sito locale?
103 TEMPO DI LETTURA MIN

SILENCED MAJORITY

BY ALEV SCOTT

Sevgi Akarçeşme made sure she arrived at work early on the day her Istanbul office was swarmed by riot police. “[President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan had made it clear he was going after us,” says the former editor of Today’s Zaman, an English-language newspaper that had been highly critical of Turkey’s president and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). On March 3, someone who goes by the name “Fuat Avni,” an increasingly unreliable whistleblower active on social media, had declared that a raid was imminent on the Zaman newspaper, owned by Feza Publications, which also owns Today’s Zaman and the Cihan News Agency. This time, Avni was right.

“That night, I couldn’t sleep. I knew it was a matter of hours,” recalls Akarçeşme. “So I went to the office before dawn—my colleagues were already there. We had breakfast together and started waiting. The official court decision [to seize the media group] arrived at 3 p.m. We realized we had to push for an early print that day, no matter how incomplete, so we went to print with only eight pages.”

Sbloccate questo articolo e molto altro con
Si può godere di:
Godetevi questa edizione per intero
Accesso immediato a oltre 600 titoli
Migliaia di numeri arretrati
Nessun contratto o impegno
Prova per €1.09
ABBONATI ORA
30 giorni di accesso, poi solo €11,99 / mese. Disdetta in qualsiasi momento. Solo per i nuovi abbonati.


Per saperne di più
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Questo articolo è...


View Issues
Newsweek International
15th July 2016
VISUALIZZA IN NEGOZIO

Altri articoli in questo numero


BIG SHOTS
Airport Insecurity
Istanbul—Two women flee from Atatürk airport on June 28. Three
Old Girls’ Club
Cincinnati— Presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton hugs Elizabeth Warren after
Foiled Again
London— Boris Johnson, the flamboyant former mayor of London who
Sorry, Texas
Washington, D.C.— People cheer in front of the Supreme Court
PAGE ONE
CAN EUROPE SAVE ITSELF?
ON THE MORNING after the Brexit vote, a dazed Donald
Don’t Mind the Alligators
When an alligator killed Lane Graves, 2, in June by
COPS AND BLOGGERS
MAJD ATWAN, a 22-year-old Palestinian beautician and activist, sits on
THE TRUMP PREQUEL
CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR Pete Wilson wasn’t backing down. After speaking at
FEATURES
THE LAST NAZI HUNTER
EFRAIM ZUROFF has accomplished much in his long career, but
NEW WORLD
SAVED BY THE SUN
JACINTA AUMA shuffles into her dim, mudwalled house, sits down,
DEATH AFTER BIRTH
ANIKA CRENSHAW planned on a vaginal birth for her second
TEACHING DRIVERLESS CARS WHOM TO KILL
IT’S THE NEAR future. A self-driving car is zipping its
PRO–VIRTUAL LIFE
WHEN PLANNED PARENTHOOD first invited me to see its virtual
DOWNTIME
FURST AMONG SEQUELS
LIKE A MICHELIN-STARRED chef or a composer of classical music,
THE HOLLOW-CORE MESSAGE
ENTERING THE NEW Apple Store in San Francisco’s Union Square,
TAKING A POP AT CHAMPAGNE
OTHER THAN France, Britain is the world’s largest market for
SOUK UP THE RAYS
AN HOUR AFTER my plane lands at Marrakech’s gleaming, modern
DIOR ENCORE
SIDNEY TOLEDANO, president and CEO of Dior, likes to tell
To-Do List the
1 DRINK The Cité du Vin wine museum has opened