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TEHRAN: European Parliament Adopts Negative Report On Turkey

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  • TEHRAN: European Parliament Adopts Negative Report On Turkey

    EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT ADOPTS NEGATIVE REPORT ON TURKEY

    Islamic Republic News Agency, Iran
    Sept 27 2006

    The European Parliament adopted Wednesday a report which is critical
    of the slow reform process, religious discrimination and free speech
    and the role of the army in Turkey.

    The report adopted by 429 votes in favor 71 against with 125
    abstentions reiterates the EP's position that membership negotiations
    with Turkey are an 'open-ended process, and do not lead a priori and
    automatically to accession'.

    The EP report comes a day after the EU announced that Bulgaria and
    Romania will join the European bloc on January 1, 2007.

    MEPs called on Turkey to recognize the Republic of Cyprus, withdraw
    its forces from the island and lift its embargo on Cypriot vessels
    and aircraft.

    The report warns Turkey that a lack of progress in implementing the
    Ankara protocol 'will have serious implications for the negotiation
    process, and could even bring it to a halt'.

    The EP, however, rejected a para in the report that called the
    acknowledgement of the 'Armenian genocide' a 'precondition' for
    Turkey's EU accession.

    The report noted that, although the recognition of the Armenian
    genocide as such is formally not one of the criteria for EU membership,
    it is indispensable for a country on the road to membership to come
    to terms with and recognize its past.

    MEPs urge Turkey to take the necessary steps, without any
    preconditions, to establish diplomatic and good neighbourly relations
    with Armenia, to withdraw the economic blockade and to open the land
    border at an early date.

    MEPs urged Turkish authorities to 'fulfill their commitments regarding
    freedom of religion', since they noted an 'absence of progress'
    in this area.

    It notes that an important discussion on headscarves is going on
    within Turkish society; points out that there are no European rules
    in this matter, but expresses its hope that a compromise will be found
    in Turkey on the wearing of headscarves by students at universities.

    The House welcomed 'the opening of broadcasting in Kurdish' while
    nevertheless noting the continued intimidation of civil society
    representatives in the southeast of the country.

    The report 'strongly condemns the resurgence of terrorist violence
    on the part of the PKK' and 'calls on the PKK to declare and respect
    an immediate ceasefire'.

    It also pleads for 'a democratic solution to the Kurdish issue'.

    The Parliament also expressed its 'serious concern' about the
    'non-respect for women's rights' and the high role of the military
    in Turkish public life.
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