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EU parl. to vote on backing Turkey membership bid on eve of summit

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  • EU parl. to vote on backing Turkey membership bid on eve of summit

    EU parliament to vote on backing Turkey's membership bid on eve of key EU
    summit

    By CONSTANT BRAND
    .c The Associated Press


    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - The European Parliament is expected to call
    on EU leaders Wednesday to open membership talks with Turkey, but only
    if the country carries out a slew of democratic reforms, including a
    zero-tolerance policy against torture.

    The 732-member EU assembly meeting in Strasbourg, France, is to vote
    on more than 80 amendments to a resolution concerning Turkey's
    ambitions to join the 25-nation bloc. Many of the amendments, drafted
    by conservatives and euro-skeptics, call for the EU not to start entry
    talks.

    The resolution, which the parliament's influential foreign affairs
    committee drafted and passed two weeks ago, is nonbinding. It calls
    for EU leaders, who will meet on Thursday and Friday, to ``open the
    negotiations with Turkey without undue delay'' if Ankara meets the
    conditions, including economic, political and judicial reforms.

    EU leaders will decide during the summit on whether to open talks with
    Turkey and when the negotiations should begin.

    There has been growing public anxiety within the EU over allowing a
    large, poor and predominantly Muslim country to join, and lawmakers
    were expected to toughen the conditions in the resolution and try to
    influence leaders to do the same during their crucial talks.

    Hans-Gert Poettering, leader of the conservative European People's
    Party, the largest group in the parliament, warned of ``historical
    consequences'' if Turkey is allowed to join and said it would change
    the EU forever.

    ``If there are negotiations, then we will negotiate with a country in
    which there are enormous human rights violations,'' Poettering said
    during a debate on Monday.

    German and French conservatives have demanded a tougher resolution,
    demanding Turkey officially recognize Cyprus as a condition to opening
    talks. Other resolutions demand Turkey recognize the killing of
    Armenians nearly a century ago as genocide.

    One, drafted by French conservative Jacques Toubon, calls on Turkey to
    ``formally acknowledge the historic reality of the genocide
    perpetrated against the Armenians.''

    Armenians accuse Turkey of genocide in the killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenians as part of a 1915-1923 campaign to force them out of
    eastern Turkey.

    Ankara vehemently denies the genocide, says the death count is
    inflated and that Armenians were killed or displaced along with others
    as the Ottoman Empire tried to quell civil unrest.

    The question of Turkey recognizing Cyprus has become a key dispute
    between Turkey and EU governments ahead of Thursday's summit, but
    Turkey's Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said Ankara has no plans to do
    so before the meeting.

    The island has been divided into a Greek Cypriot-controlled south and
    a Turkish-occupied north since Turkey invaded in 1974 after an
    abortive coup by supporters of union with Greece. Only Turkey
    recognizes the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state, and Ankara does not
    recognize the Greek-Cypriot government in the south.

    The resolution already says that opening negotiations would
    ``presuppose recognition by Turkey'' of Cyprus, which joined the EU in
    May and so would be involved in Turkey's membership negotiations.

    Other amendments, supported by France and Denmark, call for the EU to
    prepare a backup plan in case entry talks fail or Turkey backtracks in
    democratic reforms.



    12/15/04 03:25 EST
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