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Schroeder highlights human rights during Turkey visit

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  • Schroeder highlights human rights during Turkey visit

    Schroeder highlights human rights during Turkey visit

    Expatica, Netherlands
    May 4 2005

    ANKARA - Turkey must continue to implement human rights reforms ahead
    of European Union membership negotiations due to begin in October,
    German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said on Wednesday.

    In Turkey for a two-day official visit, Schroeder told Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan that the reforms already passed by Turkey were
    important, but that proper implementation was necessary.

    He said that changes to the law to give religious minorities further
    rights were a good step, but that the reforms must go further.

    Erdogan said, however, that there had been no direct request from
    Schroeder to allow the reopening of a Greek Orthodox seminary on the
    Marmara Sea island of

    Heybeliada, which has been closed since 1971 when all private tertiary
    institutions were outlawed.

    Speaking at a press conference with Erdogan, Schroeder tried to allay
    fears in Turkey that failure to ratify the EU constitution would
    mean Turkey being left outside the union. The treaty is viewed as
    essential for an expanded EU.

    Schroeder said he supported a Turkish proposal for a joint meeting
    of historians to discuss whether the deaths of hundreds of thousands
    of Armenians during World War One constituted genocide.

    Turkey historically has denied genocide took place and the issue has
    threatened to hurt Turkey's EU membership chances.

    Speaking later at Marmara University in Istanbul where he received an
    honorary doctorate, Schroeder said Turkey could learn from Germany's
    own experience.

    In coming to terms with what it did during World War Two, it had
    contributed to peace in Europe. The once hated enemies, France and
    Germany, were now close friends.

    The German chancellor also met Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
    in Ankara and the spiritual leader of the Greek Orthodox Church,
    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, and attended a Turkish- German
    Economic Forum.
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