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EU Rebukes Turkey On Reform Pace

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  • EU Rebukes Turkey On Reform Pace

    EU REBUKES TURKEY ON REFORM PACE
    By Dan Bilefsky International Herald Tribune

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Sept 4 2006

    BRUSSELS European Union lawmakers on Monday sharply criticized Turkey
    for its slow pace of reform and warned that failure to make progress
    in a dispute over Cyprus risked bringing entry negotiations to a halt.

    The toughly worded report by the European Parliament's powerful
    foreign affairs committee also cited insufficient progress on freedom
    of expression and raised concerns about the country's treatment of
    religious minorities, the Kurdish population and women.

    The European Parliament must approve whether a candidate country
    can join the EU and its views are seen as an important barometer of
    a country's membership prospects. Negotiations are expected to last
    up to 15 years.

    "The European Parliament regrets the slowing down of the reform
    process," said the report, written by Camiel Eurlings, a Dutch
    conservative. He chided Turkey for "persistent shortcomings"
    and singled out Cyprus as a key stumbling block. The Parliament's
    impatience reflects a growing wariness in the EU of the risks of
    further enlargement and of Turkey's candidacy in particular.

    The possibility of Turkey's eventual admission was a significant
    factor in the rejection of the EU's constitution in France and the
    Netherlands, where voters remain anxious about admitting a large,
    agrarian Muslim country.

    Olli Rehn, the EU's expansion commissioner, recently warned that
    Turkey was heading toward a "train crash" with the EU.

    The European Commission, the EU's executive, will publish its
    assessment of Turkey's membership progress on Oct. 24 amid growing
    concern that the momentum for reform has dramatically slowed since
    entry talks began last year. Turkey has, for example, been slow
    in enacting a promised law guaranteeing the property rights of the
    Christian minority, while a controversial article of the penal code
    used to prosecute writers and intellectuals remains on the books.

    The deepest immediate division between Turkey and the Union is
    Turkey's failure to open its ports and airports to traffic from part
    of Cyprus. Eager to avoid inflaming Turkish public opinion ahead of
    presidential elections in May and parliamentary elections in autumn
    2007, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has insisted that Turkey
    will not recognize the Greek half of the divided island until the EU
    lifts trade barriers against Turkish Cyprus, which is recognized by
    Turkey alone.

    Speaking after a two-day EU foreign ministers meeting on Saturday,
    Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja of Finland, whose country holds the
    EU's rotating presidency, warned that if Turkey failed to sign a
    protocol extending the EU customs union to Cyprus, "it will create
    a serious situation."

    Echoing his concerns, the Parliament's report Monday called on Turkey
    to recognize Cyprus by the end of 2006 or face possible suspension of
    its entry talks. "A lack of progress in this regard will have serious
    implications for the negotiation process and could even bring it to
    a halt," the report said.

    Mehmet Dulger, chairman of the Turkish Parliament's foreign affairs
    committee and a prominent member of the governing AK party, said in
    an interview that Turkey was determined to speed up reforms.

    But he added that Turks were increasingly frustrated with the demands
    placed on them by the EU and that the constant criticism by Brussels
    was creating a backlash. "All of these requirements placed on Turkey
    create the impression that the EU will never be satisfied, no matter
    what Turkey does," he said.

    He added that the EU had exacerbated the Cyprus problem by admitting
    the Greek part of the divided island before the conflict had been
    resolved.

    Referring to Turkey's progress on human rights, the report praised
    recent acquittals of scholars and novelists like Orhan Pamuk, who had
    been prosecuted for "insulting Turkishness." But it cited concerns
    over cases such as that of an Armenian-Turkish editor, Hrant Dink,
    who was recently given a suspended six-month jail term for saying
    that Turkey, under the Ottoman Empire, had committed genocide against
    Armenians during World War I.
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