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European Parliament Slams Turkey Anew

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  • European Parliament Slams Turkey Anew

    EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT SLAMS TURKEY ANEW

    AINA, CA
    Assyrian International News Agency
    Sept 6 2006

    Brussels -- Marking the start of looming crisis between Europe and
    Ankara over its accession bid, European lawmakers overwhelmingly
    approved last Monday a highly critical Report, accusing Turkey
    of slowing down necessary political and institutional reforms for
    accession into the 25 members bloc.

    The Committee of Foreign Affairs of the European Parliament voted
    through a Report, which slammed Turkey for not fulfilling the
    commitments it undertook when it received the green light last October
    to start talks.

    "The European Parliament ... regrets the slowing down of the reform
    process," the Report said, pointing to what it called "persistent
    shortcomings" in a range of areas. The lawmakers said Turkey had shown
    "insufficient progress" in the areas of freedom of __expression,
    religious and minority rights, women's rights and law enforcement
    since EU leaders agreed to start accession talks 11 months ago.

    "We are not saying that we are not still committed to the talks or that
    we do not want Turkey to join the EU," said Dutch MP Camiel Eurlings,
    who prepared the Report. "But we are sending a clear signal to Turkey
    that it must move quickly with its reforms," he told the Foreign
    Affairs Committee.

    Turkey must recognize Cyprus, withdraw its troops from the island

    The Report also urged Ankara to recognise the Republic of Cyprus,
    a UN and EU member-state, and urged it to "take concrete steps for
    the normalization of bilateral relations with the Republic as soon as
    possible." It also called Ankara to open its ports and air to Cypriot
    traffic, to stop vetoeing Cyprus' access to various international
    organizations and to withdraw in a reasonable timetable its occupation
    troops, estimated at 40.000, from the northern areas of Cyprus.

    Turkey must respect religious and ethnic minorities, women rights

    The Report also censured insufficient progress on freedom of
    __expression and raised concerns over the lot of Turkey's Christian
    religious minorities, calling for the recognition of the Ecumenical
    Patriarch, the leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, and
    the reopening of the Theological Schools of the Greek and Armenian
    Communities. The Report also criticised the unusually high threshold
    for parliamentary representation, under which a political party must
    score 10 percent nationwide; the latter aims at making difficult
    or eliminating the possibility of Kurds being elected in Turkey's
    national assembly. Violence against women and wide corruption were
    also pointed out as serious problems in the Report.

    Turkey must ackowledge the Genocide

    Moreover the Report demanded that, as a precondition of EU membership,
    Ankara should acknowledge that its predecessor, Ottoman Turkey,
    committed Genocide against Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians (Arameans)
    during WWI.

    Armenian, Greek and Assyrian (Aramean) circles have welcomed the
    Parliament's Report as objective and reflecting historical truth and
    highlighted the necessity for Turkey to cleanse its past in the same
    way as Germany did after WWII.

    Turkey Snubs the Report

    In an angrily reaction, the Turkish Foreign Ministry dismissed the
    Report, saying that it lacked common sense and smelled of political
    bias against Turkey.

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Namik Tan told a press conference that
    Turkey has no intention to open its ports and air to Cypriot traffic.

    The Turkish Prime Minister T. Erdogan also snubed the value of the
    Report as non binding and dismissed any genocide recognition.

    Turkey ostensibly denies having committed a Genocide against its
    indigenous Christian populations of Armenian, Greeks and Assyrians,
    while its Penal Code maintains relevant provisions punishing any
    discussion, in oral or written form, on the genocide issue.

    If by December 2006 Turkey has not complied, the annual EU summit
    of heads of state and government is likely to put on hold or revoke
    Turkey's accession talks.

    Any country wishing to join the 25-member bloc requires the approval
    of both the European Parliament and the agreement of all member
    states. The Report will go before a full parliament session at the
    end of the month and is likely to be raised when chief Turkish EU
    negotiator Ali Babacan visits Brussels from Wednesday. The conservative
    EPP-ED, the assembly's largest political group, still favours a
    "privileged partnership" with Turkey rather than full EU membership,
    pointing at wide and profound opposition from the European public
    opinion for an eventual EU accession of a pre-dominentaly Muslim
    country.

    Forum Against Genocide
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