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Dutch journalist says she has been arrested again in Turkey

Dutch journalist says she has been arrested again in Turkey
September 6, 2015
AMSTERDAM - A Dutch journalist and author who writes about Turkey's Kurdish minority said she had been arrested on Sunday, the second time this year she has fallen foul of the Turkish authorities. "I'm in custody in Yuksekova," Frederike Geerdink tweeted, adding that she had been travelling with a Kurdish protest group whose members were all also taken into custody. A report by the Dutch ANP news agency said Geerdink had been arrested on suspicion of "travelling in a forbidden area". Turkish authorities could not immediately be reached for comment. Geerdink, a freelance journalist based in the mainly Kurdish southeastern city of Diyarbakir, was arrested in January and accused of posting messages on social media in favour of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Her arrest was decried by human rights and press freedom groups. She was acquitted of spreading illegal propaganda in April.. Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders asked the Dutch embassy in Ankara to contact both Geerdink and Turkish authorities about the case, his office said Sunday. "The Netherlands has been concerned about freedom of the press and freedom of speech in Turkey for some time," spokesman Roel van der Meij said. "This remains an important point in our relations with Turkey." The European Federation of Journalists urged Turkey to release Geerdink immediately. Last week a Turkish court freed two British Vice News journalists who had been arrested in southeastern Turkey on suspicion of having links to a terrorist organisation, but kept their Iraqi fixer in custody. The arrests caused an uproar from rights groups and raised fresh concern about press freedom at a time when Turkey is cracking down on Kurdish militants and taking on a bigger role in the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State in Syria. The international Committee to Protect Journalists says harassment and prosecution of journalists have had a devastating impact on Turkey's media. Kurdish militants have been clashing almost daily with security forces in southeast Turkey since July, when a two-year ceasefire between the PKK and the government collapsed, with both sides blaming each other. Officials say that more than 70 members of the security forces and hundreds of Kurdish militants have been killed. Geerdink wrote a book in Dutch on Turkey's Kurds and publishes an English-language blog called "Kurdish Matters". -Reuters