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EU Parliament Slaps Turkey Over Armenians

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  • EU Parliament Slaps Turkey Over Armenians

    EU PARLIAMENT SLAPS TURKEY OVER ARMENIANS
    By Jeremy Smith

    Reuters, UK
    Sept 28 2005

    STRASBOURG, France (Reuters) - EU lawmakers gave only a grudging
    blessing on Wednesday to membership talks with Turkey starting next
    week and said Ankara must recognise a 1915 massacre of Armenians as
    genocide before it joins the bloc.

    They also criticised Turkey's human rights record and held up a vote
    to ratify an extended customs union with the 25-state European Union
    in a bid to pressure Ankara to open its ports and airports to traffic
    from EU member Cyprus.

    The European Parliament's non-binding resolution on the Armenians
    was a political slap in the face for predominantly Muslim Turkey,
    which insists the killings were not genocide.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan played down the moves, telling
    reporters: "The European Parliament's decision will not affect the
    EU process. It has no power of sanction," according to NTV television.

    The Turkish lira and stock market lost ground on the events, although
    traders said they did not believe the October 3 opening of accession
    talks was at risk.

    The EU legislature has no say over the start or conduct of the talks
    but its assent is needed before Turkey can join, which is at least
    a decade away.

    DEADLOCK ON MANDATE

    EU governments meanwhile remained deadlocked on the mandate for the
    talks, with Austria seeking a more explicit mention of an alternative
    to full membership.

    EU foreign ministers will have to hold an emergency meeting on Sunday
    in Luxembourg, hours before negotiations are to start, unless their
    ambassadors clinch a deal earlier in Brussels.

    The opening ceremony could slip to Monday evening because Turkish
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul will not board a plane until the
    EU ministers have formally endorsed a framework for negotiations,
    diplomats said.

    Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose country holds the revolving
    EU presidency, said it would be "a huge betrayal of the hopes and
    expectations of the Turkish people and of Prime Minister Erdogan's
    programme of reform if, at the crucial time, we turned our back
    on Turkey".

    The EU legislature demanded that Turkey recognise EU member Cyprus
    soon and said negotiations could be suspended unless it granted access
    to Cypriot aircraft and shipping by next year.

    Turkey, which invaded Cyprus in 1974 in response to a short- lived
    Greek Cypriot coup, has some 35,000 troops in the north of the island
    and refuses to recognise the Greek Cypriot government in the south,
    which is recognised by the European Union.

    The vote by the parliament followed an emotional debate in which many
    deputies attacked Turkey's record on human rights, religious freedom
    and minorities, reflecting widespread public hostility to the poor,
    populous nation ever joining the bloc.

    Greens party leader Daniel Cohn-Bendit caused an uproar by accusing
    some right-wing critics of Turkey of "surfing on a wave of racism".

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn regretted the decision to delay
    ratification of the customs union, saying it would weaken Brussels'
    hand with the Turks, but stressed it would have no impact on the
    start of negotiations.

    CIVIL RIGHTS

    Rehn warned Turkey it would have to amend a new penal code, adopted
    to meet EU criteria, if hardline judges were still able to prosecute
    Turkey's leading novelist for expressing his views on the killings
    of Armenians under Ottoman rule.

    An Istanbul judge is prosecuting writer Orhan Pamuk for "denigrating
    Turkish identity" by endorsing the term genocide. He faces up to
    three years in jail if convicted.

    Other judges tried in vain to halt an academic conference in Istanbul
    on the Armenian issue last week.

    Opinion polls show a majority of EU citizens, especially in France,
    Germany and Austria, oppose Turkish membership.

    (Additional reporting by Marcin Grajewski in Brussels; Zerin Elci in
    Ankara and Mike Peacock in Brighton, England)
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