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Turkey Set For New Reforms To Strengthen Democracy

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  • Turkey Set For New Reforms To Strengthen Democracy

    TURKEY SET FOR NEW REFORMS TO STRENGTHEN DEMOCRACY

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 12, 2006 Wednesday 11:52 AM GMT

    Turkey on Wednesday rejected criticism that it had lost its drive to
    align with EU norms and announced fresh reforms to further limit the
    powers of the military and expand the rights of non-Muslim minorities.

    "Some say the reforms have stopped," Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
    told a news conference. "This is not true. We are very determined to
    go ahead with the reforms."

    Turkey opened membership talks with the European Union in October,
    but the government has been accused since of failing to maintain the
    pace of the reforms, turning instead to domestic matters ahead of
    parliamentary and presidential elections in 2007.

    A particular area of concern has been the new penal code, under which
    prominent intellectuals have been brought to trial for criticizing
    state institutions or "denigrating the Turkish national identity."

    The new reform plan foresees no further amendments to the penal code,
    whose proper implementation, Gul said, requires time and a "change
    of mentality" among the judiciary.

    The package includes a bill that puts military spending -- long a
    controversial issue in Turkish politics -- under the audit of the
    Court of Accounts, which acts on the behalf of parliament.

    The government also plans an amendment to the law dealing with courts
    martial that will "reduce to a minimum the prosecution of civilians
    by military courts," Gul said.

    Another draft, already before parliament, will lift restrictions on
    the property rights of non-Muslim religious foundations, an issue on
    which the EU has long pressed Ankara.

    The bill, however, does not foresee the return to or compensation of
    non-Muslim foundations for their properties confiscated by the state
    and sold to third parties in the past.

    Predominantly Muslim Turkey is home to small groups of Jews and
    Christians, mainly Orthodox Greeks and Armenians, most of them
    concentrated in Istanbul.

    The plan contains no measures of direct concern to the sizeable
    Kurdish minority, whose leaders are seeking broader cultural and
    political freedoms.

    "Reform is an endless process," Gul said when asked about the package's
    shortcomings. "What matters is the direction one takes and Turkey's
    direction is toward more democracy and the expansion of rights and
    freedoms."

    The package also aims to:

    - make the funding of political parties more transparent,

    - set up a parliamentary political ethics committee,

    - step up the combat against corruption,

    - introduce an ombudsman system to settle differences between
    indsividuals and the state,

    - and amend the Settlement Law to end discriminatory measures against
    migrant populations, including the Rom.
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