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  • Brussels clashes with Turks on free speech and Cyprus

    euobserver.com
    23.09.2005 - 17:42 CET
    By Mark Beunderman

    Brussels clashes with Turks on free speech and Cyprus


    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Harsh words were fired from Brussels on Friday as
    the commission reacted strongly to a Turkish court's suspension of a
    conference on the Armenian massacre. Meanwhile Turkey has slammed an EU
    counter declaration on Cyprus.

    The decision yesterday (22 September) by an Istanbul court to cancel a
    conference on the mass killings of Armenians by the Ottoman empire in 1915,
    sparked a commission spokeswoman to speak of "yet another provocation".

    The term "provocation" was also used last week by enlargement commissioner
    Olli Rehn when criticising a separate Turkish court decision on the filing
    of charges against the author Orhan Pamuk - who had also raised the Armenian
    issue.

    Both the Turkish prime minister and the Turkish foreign minister were quick
    to condemn Istanbul's court decision to cancel the conference.

    "To prevent a meeting which has not yet happened and where it is not clear
    what is to be discussed has got nothing to do with democracy", prime
    minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was quoted by Reuters as saying.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul referred to the scheduled opening of accession
    talks by Ankara in just over a week (3 October), by saying "There is no one
    better than us when it comes to harming ourselves".

    Until recently it was illegal in Turkey to publicly talk about the tabu
    topic of the massacre of the Armenians, which most international historians
    have classified as genocide.

    The new penal code which Ankara had to adopt following pressure from
    Brussels ended this restriction on free speech.

    But prosecutors in Turkey are still repressing debate on the Armenian
    massacre under the reformed penal code.

    The commission signalled on Friday that the "provocations" by Turkish
    prosecutors will not interfere with Ankara's bid to start entry talks on 3
    October.

    But the commission will raise the issue in a "progress report" on Turkey,
    due in November.

    Turkey blasts counter declaration
    The atmosphere between Brussels and Ankara was already tense on Thursday, as
    the Turkish foreign ministry rebuked the EU for issuing a "counter
    statement" earlier this week in response to Ankara's refusal to recognise
    Cyprus.

    The EU in its counter declaration stated that "recognition of all member
    states is a necessary component of the accession process" - meaning that
    Ankara should recognise Nicosia before Turkey can itself enter the bloc.

    According to press reports, a Turkish foreign ministry spokesman said "we
    regret the counter-declaration that the EU issued on September 21".

    "This declaration contains some unfair approaches and some new elements that
    do not conform to the traditional spirit of cooperation that has been
    continuing between Turkey and the EU for more than 40 years", he stated.

    The spokesman added that the statement ignored the "rights and expectations
    of the Turkish Cypriot people" which he termed as a "serious injustice".

    Turkey says the EU should end the isolation of the Turkish Cypriots in the
    North of the island as quickly as possible.

    A commission proposal to open trade with the North, linked to a financial
    aid package, is being blocked by the Cypriot government.

    Direct trade with the north of the island would, in Nicosia's view, mean the
    de facto recognition of the North as a separate state.

    Abdullah Gul said "There is no one better than us when it comes to harming
    ourselves"
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