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MEPs Prepare Critical Report On Turkey

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  • MEPs Prepare Critical Report On Turkey

    MEPS PREPARE CRITICAL REPORT ON TURKEY
    By Honor Mahony

    EUobserver.com, Belgium
    Aug. 30, 2006

    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Almost a year after Turkey officially opened
    EU membership talks with Brussels, MEPs are preparing a report strongly
    critical of the country's progress on human rights issues.

    The 11-page draft report, drawn up by Dutch centre-right MEP Camiel
    Eurlings, says the the European Parliament "deplores the fact that
    only limited progress has been reported over the last year as regards
    fundamental rights and freedoms" and "deplores the absence of progress
    in the area of freedom of religion since parliament's last report."

    It notes in the preamble that "freedom of expression is far from
    satisfactory" and that "corruption remains a serious problem."

    The resolution also stresses that EU member states' negotiations with
    the country, opened last year in October, represent an "open-ended
    process and does not lead a priori and automatically to accession."

    Managing Turkey Tapping into a hot discussion held earlier this
    year on whether the EU will manage to take on board the huge and
    poor country, the draft also states the "EU's capacity to absorb
    Turkey while maintaining the momentum of integration is an important
    consideration...".

    The key topic of Ankara's non-recognition of Cyprus also features with
    the report reminding Turkey that changing this remains a "necessary
    component of the accession process."

    However, it does also note some positive aspects of Turkey's EU efforts
    saying that it "welcomes the adoption of the law on internally placed
    people" and "recognises the improvements in legislation ... as regards
    the policy of zero tolerance towards torture."

    The report, which appears annually, is causing the usual ripples
    in the EU assembly with MEPs proposing 343 amendments - around 115
    pages. Currently, they are trying to forge agreement on eight pages of
    "compromise amendments."

    MEPs from across the political spectrum are trying to get their view
    point into the report with comments on the new anti-terror laws in
    Turkey, on honour killings, on the genocide in Armenia and on changing
    the electoral threshold for representation in the parliament.

    The Cyprus issue The report is due to be voted on in the foreign
    affairs committee on Monday (4 September) and will then be put before
    the whole of the parliament, probably in late September.

    The parliament is keen to get its vote and opinion on the table as
    quickly as possible so it can influence the European Commission's
    annual report on Turkey's accession progress - due out on 26 October.

    For its part, the commission's report is set to be highly critical of
    Ankara's continued refusal to implement the Ankara protocol with the EU
    having repeatedly urged Turkey to lift its embargo on Cypriot-flagged
    vessels and aircraft as part of the country's membership negotiations.

    Turkey's signature of the protocol extending a customs accord with
    the EU to the bloc's 10 new states - including Cyprus - should result
    in the embargo being lifted.

    Ankara has indicated that any concessions to Nicosia would be
    dependent on moves by the EU to end the economic isolation of the
    Turkish-populated north of Cyprus - a stance Brussels has rejected.

    A critical report by Brussels and continued resistance by Ankara on
    the Cyprus issue is set to bring the whole issue to a political head
    later this autumn.

    http://euobserver.com/9/22294
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