Turkey’s Constitutional Court on Thursday ruled that the government’s ban on access to online encyclopedia Wikipedia violated freedom of expression, the country’s media outlets reported.
The ban imposed by Turkey’s Information and Communication Technologies Authority (BTK) has remained in place since April 2017.
Turkish officials said at the time the measure was needed as Wikipedia had failed to remove content deemed false from its pages that linked Turkey with terror groups.
But the move caused an outcry among freedom of information activists who accuse Turkey of slapping bans on websites and social media with alarming regularity.
A local court is due to decide whether the ban will be lifted, according to Turkish media reports.
In May, the Wikipedia Foundation said it would take the ban to the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights.
Rights groups have regularly criticized the erosion of free speech in Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, especially since a failed coup attempt in 2016 triggered a massive crackdown on government critics in the press and beyond.
Turkey hopes to step up coronavirus testing to reach up to 15,000 people per day, the health minister told the parliament…
Turkey on Wednesday reported its second coronavirus fatality, as the number of confirmed cases rose to 191. President Recep Tayyip…
Turkey will halt flights with nine European countries, including France, Germany and Spain, the transport minister said Friday, as part…
Turkey announced Wednesday its first coronavirus case, a man who had recently travelled to Europe and is in good health.
Hundreds of migrants in Turkey were heading towards border regions with Europe, local media reported Friday, after Turkish authorities decided…
At least 33 Turkish soldiers were killed as violence escalates in Syria's Idlib province after an air strike blamed on…