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European Socialists Accuse Right-Wing Opponents Of Not Wanting Musli

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  • European Socialists Accuse Right-Wing Opponents Of Not Wanting Musli

    EUROPEAN SOCIALISTS ACCUSE RIGHT-WING OPPONENTS OF NOT WANTING MUSLIM TURKEY IN EU

    IRNA< Iran
    Sept 28 2005

    Brussels, IRNA

    The Socialist Group (PES) in the European Parliament accused Wednesday
    the right-wing European People's Party (Christian Democrats) and
    European Democrats (EPP-ED) of being against Turkey's EU membership
    because it was a Muslim country.

    "You don't want to have Turkey because it is Islamic and far away.

    Croatia is closer and is Catholic. That is the truth of your message.

    Let us not beat about the bush. We must apply the same standards to
    all countries," PES leader Martin Schulz told EPP leader Hans-Gert
    Poettering during a heated debate on Turkey's EU membership in the
    EP in Strasbourg.

    The leader of the 219-strong Socialist Group, the second-largest in
    the EP, said "the EPP does not want Turkey. We want to give Turkey
    a chance."

    On his part, the leader of EPP - which with 267 MEPs in the 732-member
    EP is the largest group - said if EU membership was not achieved
    at the end of the process, then the alternative result must be a
    privileged partnership for Turkey.

    He said Christians' "legitimate rights" in Turkey had to be recognised
    and implemented in the same way that "Moslem citizens' rights were
    recognised in European Union countries."

    Poettering urgently called on the British Presidency of the EU to
    apply the same criteria to Croatia as that of Turkey.

    "Everyone has shut their eyes on the human rights issue in Turkey
    while Croatia was to be refused the start of negotiations because a
    single general - one who was plainly not even in Croatia - had not
    yet been delivered up to the Hague Tribunal," he said.

    The EU has postponed talks on Croatia's membership because of Zagreb's
    failure to arrest a war crimes suspect Gen Ante Gotovina.

    But EU states like Austria and Hungary want Croatia to start talks
    at the same time as Turkey on October 3.

    The co-president of the Green/EFA (European Free Alliance), Daniel
    Cohn-Bendit, also criticized the EPP saying "some of the opponents
    of Turkey's accession are surfing on a wave of cultural and racist
    prejudices."

    "This is a dangerous game," he said adding that "the question of
    European Islam exists with or without Turkey. There are already more
    Muslims in the EU than there are Belgians."

    The EP Wednesday voted in favour of starting talks on Turkish accession
    on October 3, but insisted on a number of conditions before it is
    allowed entry.

    MEPs insisted that Turkey recognise the killings of thousands of
    Armenians in 1915 as genocide.

    The EP also postponed a vote on ratifying Turkey's customs arrangements
    with the EU because of its refusal to recognise the Greek Cypriot
    government.

    At the request of the EPP-ED group, EP voted 311 votes in favour,
    285 against and 63 abstentions to postpone the vote
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