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VICE News Journalists Transferred to Prison Hours From Legal Help

Three VICE News journalists — who remain detained in Turkey on baseless and false charges — have now been transported to a prison more than five hours from where their legal representation is based.

VICE News' team of three journalists — who remain detained in Turkey for entirely baseless and absurd charges — have now been transported to a high-security "F-type" prison facility more than five hours away from where their legal representation is based, and from the court where they are due to appear, said Kevin Sutcliffe, VICE's Head of News Programming in Europe.

"This move appears to be a blatant obstruction of the fair legal process that Turkey has repeatedly pledged to uphold. We call on the Turkish government to throw out these ridiculous charges and immediately release our colleagues," he said today.

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A Turkish court leveled formal charges of terrorism at two VICE News journalists and their colleague on Monday, as global rights groups have continued to call for the reporters to be released.

British journalists Jake Hanrahan and Philip Pendlebury, and Turkey-based Iraqi translator and journalist Mohammed Ismael Rasool, have been detained since late Thursday evening local time in Turkey. The three were taken into custody in the southeastern Turkish city of Diyarbakir with their driver, who was released on Monday.

Mohammed Ismael Rasool

Sutcliffe also condemned the detention of the journalists in a statement on Monday.

"Today the Turkish government has leveled baseless and alarmingly false charges of 'working on behalf of a terrorist organization' against three VICE News reporters, in an attempt to intimidate and censor their coverage," he said. "Prior to being unjustly detained, these journalists were reporting and documenting the situation in the southeastern Turkish province of Diyarbakir.

"VICE News condemns in the strongest possible terms the Turkish government's attempts to silence our reporters who have been providing vital coverage from the region," he added. "We continue to work with all relevant authorities to expedite the safe release of our three colleagues and friends."

Global human rights groups, including Amnesty International, PEN International, and the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ), have all joined in calls for the immediate release of the reporters.

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"It is completely proper that journalists should cover this important story," Amnesty said in a statement. "The decision to detain the journalists was wrong, while the allegation of assisting the Islamic State is unsubstantiated, outrageous, and bizarre."

The charges come amid a crackdown on free speech in Turkey. Zeynep Oral, president of PEN Turkey, noted that it is becoming increasingly difficult for journalists to work in the country.

"In a period of uncertainty, both in the country and in the region, we are in the greatest need of freedom of expression and the right to know," Oral said. "We ask for justice and the immediate release of journalists doing their jobs."

Increased government censorship includes efforts to temporarily shut down social media websites like Twitter and YouTube — both mediums widely used during the Arab Spring uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa in 2011. Media suppression has reportedly intensified after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan failed to win a majority in the June election.

"[Erdogan] has intensified his efforts to crush all critical coverage, but most particularly coverage of the escalating conflicts in the predominantly Kurdish southeast," Maureen Freely, president of English PEN said. "His aim, as always, is to control the story. If these journalists are left to languish in prison, he will have had his way."

Despite Turkey's advancing commitment to fighting extremists along with the US-led coalition in the Middle East, it remains hesitant to arm and train Kurdish fighters battling IS along Turkey's border with Syria, fearing they will align with the PKK sectarian group, which Turkey has deemed as a terrorist organization.

Hanrahan and Pendlebury are both experienced reporters. Together, they have covered the migrant crisis in Calais, the British election, Scottish referendum, Irish republicanism, and various other stories. They have forged a fruitful working partnership and are close friends.

Besides his work for VICE News, Hanrahan has written for the Guardian, the Independent, Wired, and Rolling Stone Middle East. Pendlebury is an accomplished cameraman and editor who has filmed in Iraq, Afghanistan, North Korea, and throughout Europe.

Rasool is an experienced journalist and translator who has worked with VICE News in Iraq previously. He also has worked extensively around the Middle East with the Associated Press,Anatolia Agency, and Al Jazeera.

Follow VICE News on Twitter: @vicenews