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ANKARA: EU Council Replies to Brussels on Turkey Progress Report

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  • ANKARA: EU Council Replies to Brussels on Turkey Progress Report

    Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 11 2006


    EU Council Replies to Brussels on Turkey Progress Report
    By Emre Demir
    Saturday, November 11, 2006
    zaman.com


    The Council of Europe replied to the EU Turkey progress report's
    recommendation that Turkey should expand the definition of a minority
    in line with international and European standards.

    Speaking to Zaman, sources from the Council of Europe noted that
    Europe has no universal standard on the definition of minority,
    contrary to what the report said.

    `According to the Turkish authorities, under the Treaty of Lausanne,
    minorities in Turkey consist exclusively of non-Muslim religious
    communities. The minorities associated in practice by the authorities
    with the Treaty of Lausanne are Jews, Armenians and Greeks. However,
    there are other communities in Turkey which, in the light of the
    relevant international and European standards, could qualify as
    minorities,' according to the progress report released by the
    European Commission on Nov. 8.


    The report also criticizes Turkey for not having signed the Council
    of Europe Framework Convention for the Protection of National
    Minorities, Europe's only official agreement on national minorities.
    However, authorities from the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe
    state there is no minority definition agreed on in the convention.

    Sources from the Council of Europe told Zaman that Europe has no
    common standards on what communities can be defined as minorities.

    `Europe has no general definition of minority and no common standards
    to determine which communities can be defined as minorities. As a
    result, the Council of Europe won't pressure any state to recognize
    new minority groups,' sources said.

    The 45-member Council of Europe, including Turkey, promotes and
    protects human rights, minority rights and democracy.

    Furthermore, the progress report, in the section dealing with
    minority reports, said although Turkish Public Television (TRT) has
    continued broadcasting in five languages, including

    Kurdish, the duration and scope of these broadcasts is very limited.

    Greece, an EU member state, refuses to broadcast in minority
    languages and founding members such as Germany and France are
    criticized for insufficient broadcasting periods as well.

    Germany faced criticism over insufficient programming in minority
    languages in a Council of Europe Ministers Committee report in March.


    Germany has one hour per week radio broadcast in Frisian and
    10-minute TV broadcast in Sorbian.

    Several minority groups in France also find the TV broadcasting in
    their languages insufficient.

    France broadcasts 45-minutes a week in Occitan and just five minutes
    a week in the Catalan language.

    Weekly broadcasts in Breton, widely spoken in northern France, were
    ended in early 2006 for `lack of interest.'

    One of the countries that did not sign the convention is Greece.
    Though an EU member state, Athens allows no radio or TV broadcasts in
    any minority language. Several languages, including Turkish,
    Macedonian and Albanian are spoken in the country.

    Turkey did not sign the European Charter for Regional or Minority
    Languages protecting educational and broadcasting rights in minority
    languages.

    In addition to Turkey, France, Belgium, Greece and Luxembourg also
    refused to sign the convention.
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