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Turkey Gives In On Free Speech But Cuts Army Ties With Paris

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  • Turkey Gives In On Free Speech But Cuts Army Ties With Paris

    TURKEY GIVES IN ON FREE SPEECH BUT CUTS ARMY TIES WITH PARIS
    By Mark Beunderman

    EUobserver.com, Belgium
    Nov 16 2006

    In a move to curry favour with the EU, Turkey has said it will quickly
    change a notorious article of its penal code curbing free speech - but
    at the same time, Ankara has put its ties with France under further
    strain by suspending military cooperation following a dispute over
    the Armenian genocide.

    Turkish officials on Wednesday (15 November) announced they will work
    towards amending the notorious article 301 of the penal code which
    penalises insulting "Turkishness" before EU leaders meet for a 14-15
    December summit meeting, which is set to be dominated by a debate on
    the fate of Ankara's embattled EU accession process.

    Newswires cite Turkish officials as saying the country's ruling AKP
    party hopes to have a parliamentary vote on the issue "in the first
    week of December," just ahead of the EU leaders' meeting.

    Revision of article 301 is seen as a symbolically important move,
    with a critical European Commission report on Turkey's accession
    process earlier this month highlighting the article as contributing
    to a "climate of self-censorship in the country."

    The article has been used to bring charges against various
    intellectuals or journalists including Nobel Prize winner Orham Pamuk,
    with important parts of Turkish civil society also eager to get rid
    of it.

    But while the announced concession on free speech could take some of
    the criticism on Turkey away at the December summit, one important
    EU player - France - on Wednesday saw its tense relations with Ankara
    further deteriorate as a Turkish general announced that military ties
    with Paris will be suspended.

    "Relations with France in the military field have been suspended,"
    general Ilker Basbug said according to press reports, adding the move
    is a protest against pending French legislation which would penalise
    the denial of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

    The new French bill, adopted by the French National Assembly but
    still waiting for approval from the Senate, makes it a crime to deny
    that Armenians suffered genocide by the Ottoman Turks, with Ankara
    describing the bill immediately after adoption in October as a
    "severe blow" to French-Turkish relations.

    Ankara denies that the mass killings of Armenians during World War
    I constituted a genocide.

    The row is escalating just as Paris is defining its position on whether
    or not to suspend Turkey's EU accession talks over the Cyprus issue,
    with Brussels and EU capitals pressing Ankara to open its ports and
    airports to traffic from Cyprus before the December summit.

    Ankara's continuing failure to open up to shipping from Cyprus -
    and EU member which Ankara does not recognise - could jeopardise the
    accession negotiations, with member states currently debating whether
    the talks should be fully or partially frozen.

    Turkish foreign minister Abdullah Gul said on Wednesday that his
    country is not ready to compromise over the issue, stating "We won't
    bow to blackmail, in the same way that we did not bow to blackmail
    in the past."

    The Finnish EU presidency is currently engaged in intense diplomatic
    efforts to save the Turkey talks, proposing in a trade-off plan that
    the EU lift the isolation of Turkish Cypriots in the North of the
    island in return for Turkey allowing trade from Cyprus.
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