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  • Catholics say EU must set conditions for Turkey

    Catholics say EU must set conditions for Turkey
    By Paul Taylor

    BRUSSELS, Nov 19 (Reuters) - Roman Catholic bishops from across the
    European Union questioned on Friday whether Turkey was ready to open
    EU membership talks and said Brussels should set further human rights
    conditions for starting negotiations.

    The Bishops' Conferences of the European Community (COMECE) said
    there was no religious obstacle to the overwhelmingly Muslim nation
    joining the EU, but Turkey must respect basic rights such as equality
    for women and religious freedom.

    "Therefore it must be asked whether it is appropriate to open
    negotiations with Turkey, whilst fundamental rights including
    religious freedom are not fully respected in that state," they said
    in a statement.

    The prelates noted that the executive European Commission, in its
    report on Turkey's candidacy last month, had pointed to remaining
    shortcomings but not linked the opening of talks to better respect
    of those rights.

    "The Bishops of COMECE propose that before negotiations... begin with
    Turkey, the Turkish government is required to correct shortcomings
    with regard to religious freedom and the legal status of minorities
    according to the provisions of the Treaty of Lausanne 1923," the
    statement said.

    They urged EU leaders to include this provision in their decision
    at a summit on Dec. 17 on whether and when to open accession talks
    with Turkey.

    The bishops said the question of starting accession talks with Turkey
    was political, not religious.

    They rejected wording that would have questioned more fundamentally
    whether the EU could admit Turkey.

    An initial draft of the statement seen by Reuters said EU leaders
    should question "whether the European Union is capable in the medium
    term of absorbing such a large country with Turkey's history and
    geostrategic position."

    The Lausanne Treaty recognises Christian Greeks, Armenians and Jews
    as minorities with official status in the country.

    The treaty does not mention Kurds, Circassians, Arabs or non-Sunni
    Alevis as minorities. Human rights groups say the definition should
    be widened to include them, but the Turkish government opposes this.

    The Roman Catholic church has historically supported European
    integration. Bishop Anton Stres of Slovenia noted it had played a
    role in mobilising the 'yes' vote in referendums on accession in the
    10 mainly east European states which joined the EU on May 1.

    Asked whether the church would campaign for a 'yes' to the EU
    constitution despite its failure to obtain a mention of God or
    Europe's Christian heritage, the bishops said the charter enshrines a
    permanent dialogue between churches and other religious institutions
    and EU institutions.

    "We can express ourselves in favour of the pursuit of European
    unification," Stres said.

    11/19/04 16:10 ET
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