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Senior EU lawmaker says Turkey must look at freedom of speech provis

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  • Senior EU lawmaker says Turkey must look at freedom of speech provis

    Senior EU lawmaker says Turkey must look at freedom of speech provisions
    By JAN SLIVA, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 20, 2006 Wednesday 10:26 AM GMT

    BRUSSELS Belgium -- A senior European Union lawmaker said Wednesday
    progress could be made soon over freedom of speech provisions in
    Turkey's penal code, a controversial issue hampering the country's
    negotiations with the EU.

    Dutch EU deputy Joost Lagendijk, chairman of the parliament's group
    dealing with Turkey, spoke a day after the European Commission said
    it was delaying by two weeks a progress report on Turkey's bid to
    join the EU due to what it said were scheduling reasons.

    Lagendijk said the delay may have to do with increased efforts to make
    progress over article 301 of the penal code, which sets out penalties
    for insulting the Turkish Republic, its officials, or "Turkishness,"
    and has been used to bring charges against dozens of journalists,
    publishers and scholars. The article is strongly criticized by the EU.

    "If one listens carefully to Turkish officials ... there probably is
    a chance to reach progress over article 301," Lagendijk said, adding
    that Turkey "may also have come to the conclusion that article 301
    is counterproductive."

    "Something could happen in the next two months," said Lagendijk,
    who will be an observer at the Sept. 21 trial of best-selling Turkish
    author Elif Shafak, charged with "insulting Turkishness" in a novel
    that deals with the waning years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey's parliament convened on Tuesday to begin voting on reforms,
    including the strengthening of minority rights, as the government
    tries to deflect EU criticism that the pace of change has slowed.

    But Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said changing the
    law most often used to try authors was not on parliament's immediate
    agenda.

    Lagendijk and German deputy Cem Ozdemir called for toning down a
    separate report on Turkey by the European Parliament's foreign affairs
    committee, which they said stepped up demands on Turkey to join the EU,
    going beyond the conditions originally laid down by the 25-nation bloc.

    While Lagendijk and Ozdemir backed the key points of the report,
    notably that Turkey must open its sea and air ports to Cypriot ships
    and planes, they said a number of amendments to the report go too
    far, making it biased against Turkey and damaging the parliament's
    credibility.

    The report was approved by the foreign affairs committee earlier this
    month and will be debated by the full 732-member assembly during a
    plenary session next week in Strasbourg, France.

    The report is critical of Turkey's refusal to recognize the killing of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I as genocide,
    and the recommends making such recognition a prerequisite for Turkey
    joining the EU.

    Lagendijk and Ozdemir argued the EU had not originally set any such
    condition. They also said the report unfairly puts pressure on Turkey
    over its treatment of other ethnic minorities, such as Assyrians
    and Greeks.

    They also pressed for return to a blueprint plan to reunite Cyprus
    drafted by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, which was approved
    by Turkish Cypriots, but rejected by Greek Cypriots in separate
    referendums in April 2004.

    Cyprus has been divided since Turkish troops invaded in 1974 after a
    coup attempt by supporters of union with Greece. The Greek Cypriot
    south has an internationally recognized government. Only Turkey
    recognizes the Turkish Cypriot north.

    EU officials hinted in July that entry talks with Turkey begun in
    October may crash because of Ankara's continuing failure to recognize
    Cyprus or allow in its ships and airplanes.

    But Lagendijk said he does not believe a stalling of talks is imminent.

    "A train crash is unlikely. We may have a minicrash, putting aside
    some of the negotiating chapters" that have to do with Cyprus or
    freedom of speech provisions, he said.

    Turkey must complete 35 so-called "negotiating chapters," each dealing
    with a different policy field, before it can join the EU, a process
    expected to take at least a decade.
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