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New EU Warning On Turkey Reforms

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  • New EU Warning On Turkey Reforms

    NEW EU WARNING ON TURKEY REFORMS

    BBC News, UK
    Sept 27 2006

    Turkey faces years of tough EU membership negotiations The European
    Parliament has adopted a report warning that the pace of reform in
    Turkey has slowed, jeopardising Ankara's EU membership bid.

    But MEPs dropped a clause demanding that Turkey recognise as "genocide"
    the mass killings of Armenians in 1915.

    Turkey maintains that the Armenians were casualties of turmoil as the
    Ottoman empire crumbled. Armenians say up to 1.5 million died in a
    "genocide".

    The non-binding report said Turkey had failed to ensure freedom
    of expression.

    It called for the abolition or amendment of Turkish laws such as
    Article 301 "which threaten European free speech norms".

    Article 301 of the Turkish penal code has been used to prosecute
    several well-known authors for "insulting Turkishness".

    Cyprus deadlock

    The MEPs also called on Turkey to recognise the Republic of Cyprus
    and lift its embargo on Cypriot ships and planes, saying continued
    failure to do so "will have serious implications for the [EU]
    negotiation process and could even bring it to a halt".

    The report was adopted by 429 votes in favour to 71 against, with
    125 abstentions.

    It said the European Parliament "regrets the slowing down of the reform
    process" in Turkey, though it welcomed some recent Turkish steps to
    crack down on torture and corruption and to extend women's rights.

    On the Armenian question, MEPs said Turkey must come to terms with
    its past, although recognition of the "genocide" was not a condition
    for EU accession.

    The European Commission is to publish its next annual report on
    Turkey's progress on 8 November.

    The parliament's report came a day after Bulgaria and Romania were
    given the go-ahead to join the EU on 1 January 2007.

    In Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned the EU
    against introducing any new entrance criteria.
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