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Police brutality endangers Turkey's EU bid

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  • Police brutality endangers Turkey's EU bid

    BBC News, UK
    March 8 2005

    European Press Review

    [parts omitted]

    Police brutality endangers Turkey's EU bid

    Germany's Der Tagesspiegel warns that a lot can still go wrong with
    Turkey's EU bid after police clamped down on a demonstration to mark
    International Women's Day.

    The paper says there is continuing police brutality and torture,
    Christian minorities still lack rights, and writers who speak out of
    turn on the issue of Armenia are criminalised.

    They won't hesitate to use images from Sunday, and for once they
    are right

    Berlingske Tidende

    "Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government doesn't seem to
    realise that its reforms to date only represent an intermediate stop,
    not the final destination," it says.

    The paper acknowledges that on paper Turkey has reached European
    standards in many fields, but it adds that the implementation of new
    laws is hampered by "strong resistance in the civil service apparatus".

    The EU's decision to open accession negotiations only marks the
    beginning of a process in which Turkish "subjects" should become
    "citizens", the paper argues.

    "If this doesn't happen, then the accession talks will fail,"
    it predicts.

    Denmark's Berlingske Tidende says "the version of Turkey which beat
    down a women's demonstration in Istanbul using ridiculously violent
    means is not a nation which belongs in the modern European community".

    Worse than the authorities' brutality, the paper says, is the fact
    that "the image of Turkey which the police's conduct in Istanbul
    demonstrated for all of Europe may make it more difficult for the
    European Constitutional Treaty to be approved in certain countries,
    not least France".

    Turkey's EU accession and the Treaty may not be related in formal
    terms, it goes on, "but the debate on Turkey's future in the EU is
    still high on the agenda among opponents of the Constitution".

    "They won't hesitate to use images from Sunday, and for once they
    are right", the daily continues.

    "The Turkey we saw has no place in the EU. This has to be made crystal
    clear to Turkish politicians", the paper says.
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