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EU Official Accuses Turkey Of Provocation

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  • EU Official Accuses Turkey Of Provocation

    EU OFFICIAL ACCUSES TURKEY OF PROVOCATION
    By Jan Sliva

    The Associated Press
    09/13/05 17:26 EDT

    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - The official in charge of European Union
    expansion accused Turkey of provocation on Tuesday, saying it was no
    coincidence that the trial of a Turkish novelist would clash with a
    EU summit.

    Olli Rehn, the EU commissioner overseeing expansion plans, said the
    prosecution of author Orhan Pamuk violated a human rights convention.

    He also said it would take at least 10-15 years to finish negotiations
    with Turkey on its possible accession to the bloc, and warned Ankara
    that the pace of the talks will depend on how quickly it recognizes
    Cyprus.

    "The Pamuk case raises serious questions about the interpretation of
    Turkey's new penal code. The Dec. 16 date can't be just a coincidence,
    it has to be a provocation," Rehn told the European Parliament's
    foreign affairs committee. Dec. 16 is also the date of an EU summit.

    Rehn added that the case violated the European Convention on Human
    Rights.

    Pamuk has been charged with insulting Turkey's national character and
    could face prison for his comments on Turkey's killing of Armenians
    and Kurds.

    "Thirty-thousand Kurds and one million Armenians were killed in these
    lands and nobody but me dares to talk about it," Pamuk was quoted as
    saying in an interview with a Swiss newspaper magazine in February.

    The "one million Armenians" refers to Armenians killed by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I, which Armenians and several
    other nations recognize as the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Turkey vehemently denies that a genocide took place, saying the
    death toll is inflated and Armenians were killed in a civil war as
    the Ottoman Empire collapsed, eventually giving way to the Turkish
    Republic in 1923.

    Turkey, which has been trying to improve its human rights record
    as it vies for EU membership, is extremely sensitive about both the
    Armenian and Kurdish issues, and the new Turkish penal code makes it
    a crime to denigrate Turkey's national identity.

    The code - adopted at the EU's insistence - was debated earlier this
    year and freedom of speech advocates said the clause on national
    identity was too vague and could lead to the imprisonment of artists,
    scholars and journalists.

    Rehn said the European Commission will continue to closely monitor
    human rights issues in Turkey, but still expects the accession
    negotiations to start on Oct. 3 as scheduled, despite EU government
    grumbling over Turkey's refusal to recognize Cyprus.

    In August, Turkey signed a customs protocol extending its existing
    customs arrangements with the 25-member EU to the 10 new members
    including Cyprus. But it accompanied its signature with a separate
    declaration saying this did not mean it was formally recognizing the
    divided Mediterranean island.

    Rehn said formal recognition "was not a precondition" to start the
    Oct. 3 talks. "However, it is regrettable that Turkey had to issue
    a declaration accompanying the protocol," he said.

    The European Court of Human Rights - based in Strasbourg, France -
    ordered Turkey on Tuesday to pay more than $85,932 to the relatives
    of two suspected members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party
    who were killed in a police raid in 1996.

    An anti-terrorist squad shot Omer Bayram and Ridvan Altun in an
    operation which the court said violated three articles of the human
    rights convention.
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