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Ans Boersma: Timeline of Deportation

Timeline of Events

Ans Boersma is Turkey correspondent from the Netherlands, and will be covering the election season in Turkey, 2018. Boersma has travelled through the country

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2019

January 16

Johanna Cornelia Boersma’s house was raided by the Turkish police. The journalist is the economy editor at Het Financieele Dagblad. She was arrested and detained for her alleged affiliation with a terrorist organization.

January 17

Journalist Ans Boersma was subsequently deported after her detention. Turkish officials announced that the journalists had been deported "on the grounds that she linked the terrorist organization". They acknowledged that the Dutch intelligence had shared the information of her possible link to a terrorist group with the Turkish authorities.

https://www.inkl.com/news/turkey-deports-dutch-journalist-ans-boersma-over-alleged-links-to-syrian-terror-group

January 18

Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs launched an investigation into the process of journalist Ans Boersma’s deportation from Turkey. Turkish authorities claimed that the Dutch authorities requested Boersma’s extradition. Dutch authorities denied this claim while stating that Boersma was not a "terrorist suspect".

January 19

Het Financieel Dagblad (FD) newspaper fired Ans Boersma for being not honest and forthright throughout her post in Turkey:

https://fd.nl/weekend/1286294/het-fd-verbreekt-banden-met-correspondent

Independent journalist Ans Boersma started working for the Dutch daily newspaper Het Financieele Dagblad (FD) in 2017. FD said that Boersma couldn’t believe that her Syrian ex-boyfriend was the reason behind her deportation. The chief editor of FD, Jan Bonjer, called her deportation a “blatant violation of press freedom.”

Fahrettin Altun, Presidential Communications Director in Turkey, confirmed that only Dutch authorities could clarify why Boersma was linked to terrorism and, subsequently, deported. According to the FD, Boersma was under close observation by Dutch intelligence since 2018.

January 23

Another article, published by Jan-Willem Wits in Adformatie regarding the journalist’s private life, claimed that Ans Boersmaabetted a terrorist organization, influenced by the emotional relationship with her ex-boyfriend.

https://www.adformatie.nl/reputatiemanagement/de-loverboy-van-ans-boersma

February 1

Journalist Ans Boersma’s representative Media and Legal Studies (MLSE) lawyers filed a lawsuit to annul the deportation from Turkey.

https://twitter.com/dokuz8haber/status/1091403306981879811

February 12

Another story related to Ans Boersma was revealed in de Volkskrant, written by journalists Anneke Stoffelen and Remco Andersen. In the article, the journalists tried to implicate Ans Boersma to a man known as the head of a terrorist organization. The report intended to raise suspicion against the journalist, though their claims were unfounded with no tangible proof of Ans’ connection to the man in question. The article mentioned that Boersma 'broadly knew' of his involvement with Al Nusra without any evidence.

March 5

Another article targeted Ans Boersma with the title “The Jihadist Who Loved Me: Christian Journalist In Hot Water Over Terrorism-Linked Ex-Boyfriend”. The article states that Boersma was unlikely to live down her infamy as the journalist who dated a jihadi. The article identified Boersma as a Christian, linking her faith to her empathy for Middle Eastern refugees.

https://thefederalist.com/2019/03/05/jihadist-loved-christian-journalist-hot-water-terrorism-linked-ex-boyfriend/

April 1

Ans Boersma said that she found a way to live peacefully through this time. In Turkey, she faced many challenges due to the fictitious allegations of her links to terrorist organizations. She mentioned that it is still hard to understand why the Dutch authorities needed to take such drastic measures by having her deported from Turkey.

Tom de Boer, Ans’ lawyer, expressed his regrets for how his client had to cut several professional ties after her deportation. He said that her case was widely misreported without a proper investigation.

September 23

The first hearing of Ans Boersma’s wrongful deportation case took place at The Istanbul First Administrative Court. She was unable to attend the hearing for her case because she was banned travelling to Turkey for six years. Documents submitted in her defense show that she is not the subject of any terrorism-related investigation in Turkey. The court was expected to return with a verdict within three months. However, the court rejected her request.

December 27

AD News wrote an article about the journalist’s deportation stating that "She went on a plane as a martyr of the freedom of the press and came out as a jihad bride."

https://www.ad.nl/binnenland/hoe-een-journalist-in-een-terreurzaak-verzeild-raakte~a674b1b9/?referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2F

2020

June 5

Boersma, still working as a journalist in the Netherlands, recently published an article for The Guardian. She said it is still very challenging to offer her opinion freely. Also it was unlikely for her to return to Turkey anytime soon because of various lawsuits against her. Boersma is confused why Dutch authorities felt it necessary to ask Turkey for her deportation. She was committed to resolve the matter as the court could not find any wrongdoing on her behalf.

Ans’s lawyer was satisfied with the proceedings of the Public Prosecution Service. According to him, it was unnecessary to put Boersma in such a vulnerable position in Turkey. The journalist could have easily been questioned in the Netherlands as she returns to the country every three months.

Boersma was reassured that NVJ was vigilantly following the safety of journalists abroad. She emphasised that it is crucial to stay alert, especially in countries where press freedom is under attack.