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EU Parliament Endorses Criticism On Pace Of Turkish Reforms

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  • EU Parliament Endorses Criticism On Pace Of Turkish Reforms

    EU PARLIAMENT ENDORSES CRITICISM ON PACE OF TURKISH REFORMS

    AKI, Italy
    Sept 27 2006

    Strasbourg, 27 Sept. (AKI) - Members of the European Parliament on
    Wednesday overwhelmingly adopted a report levelling stern criticism
    at European Union candidate country Turkey over its recent progress in
    implementing reforms, especially in the areas of freedom of expression,
    rights of religious minorities and the issue of its recognition of
    Cyprus. MEPs voted 429 in favour of the report, with 71 against and
    125 abstentions.

    MEPs nevertheless welcomed some recent steps by the Turkish government
    in the fields of combating torture, fighting corruption and extending
    women's rights. They also rejected a controversial provision in
    the report that would have made Turkey's recognition as 'genocide'
    of the killing of over one million Armenians by Ottoman Turks during
    and after World War I a precondition for EU membership.

    MEPs called on the Turkish government to recognise the Republic of
    Cyprus (an EU member state) and to withdraw its forces from the island
    and lift its embargo on Cypriot vessels and aircraft. The report -
    prepared by Conservative Dutch MEP Camiel Eurlings - reminds Turkey
    that a lack of progress in normalising relations with Cypus "will
    have serious implications for the negotiation process and could even
    bring it to a halt." It also urges Greece and Turkey "to refrain from
    tension-prone military activities."

    The parliament called on the Turkish authorities to facilitate the
    work of researchers, intellectuals and academics studying the Armenian
    mass killings by ensuring them access to the historical archives and
    all the relevant documents. MEPs urged Turkey to establish diplomatic
    and good neighbourly relations with Armenia, to withdraw the economic
    blockade and open the land border at an early date.

    On the Kurdish question, MEPs noted the continued intimidation of
    non-governmental organisations in southeast Turkey, while welcoming the
    start of broadcasts in Kurdish. Eurlings' report "strongly condemns the
    resurgence of terrorist violence on the part of the banned separatist
    Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK)" but also urges a democratic solution
    to the issue of a Kurdish homeland in southeast Turkey.

    Despite the recent acquittal of leading novelist Elif Shafak on
    charges of "insulting Turkishness," MEPs said they remained troubled by
    persisting barriers to freedom of expression in Turkey. They called for
    the abolition or amendment of those provisions of Turkey's penal code
    which threaten freedom of speech, notably Article 301, which foresees
    punishment for 'denigrating Turkishness'. Charges were brought against
    Shafak and, previously, another leading Turkish writer, Orhan Pamuk
    under Article 301.

    Ahead of a debate of his report by the parliament on Wednesday,
    Eurlings described it as "tough but fair." He said it regretted above
    all a slowdown in implementing reforms on the role of the security
    forces in public life, trade union rights, torture and ill-treatment
    of prisoners, as well as individual freedoms.

    The European Commission is due to release its annual report on Turkey's
    progress on 8 November. It began membership talks with Turkey on 3
    October last year and Turkey is not expected to join the EU until
    2015 at earliest.
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