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Euro MPs Slam Turkey On Human Rights, Drop Genocide Clause

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  • Euro MPs Slam Turkey On Human Rights, Drop Genocide Clause

    EURO MPS SLAM TURKEY ON HUMAN RIGHTS, DROP GENOCIDE CLAUSE

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    September 27, 2006 Wednesday 1:45 PM EST

    DPA POLITICS EU Diplomacy Turkey ROUNDUP: Euro MPs slam Turkey on
    human rights, drop genocide clause Adds quotes, details on Cyprus
    issue Brussels/Strasbourg

    European lawmakers on Wednesday approved a critical report on
    Turkey's progress towards European Union membership but dropped a
    clause calling for Ankara to

    recognize the Armenian genocide before Turkey can join the bloc.

    However, Euro MPs said that although recognition of the genocide
    was not a precondition for EU accession, "it is indispensable for a
    country on the road to membership to come to terms with and recognize
    its past."

    Freedom of expression, minority religion rights and the Cyprus issue
    are the key areas where improvement is necessary, Euro lawmakers said
    in the report. It was adopted by 429 votes in favour to 71 against
    with 125 abstentions.

    Leading EU lawmakers said that the Parliament missed its chance to
    press Ankara for a solution to the thorny Cyprus issue.

    The EU has often warned of a "train crash" in Turkey's EU negotiations
    if it continued to fully implement the Ankara Protocol under which
    Turkey agreed to extend its customs union with the EU to Cyprus and
    to open its ports to Greek Cypriot ships and planes.

    "The European Parliament has taken two steps forward and one step
    back in its approach towards the controversial issue of Turkish EU
    membership," British Liberal Euro MP Andrew Duff, vice president of
    the EP delegation for relations with Turkey, said after the vote.

    "The EU still needs to fulfil its commitment to ending the isolation
    of the Turkish Cypriot community," he added.

    Euro MPs warned Turkey once again that current membership talks with
    the bloc are "open-ended" and that Ankara's entry into the 25-nation
    club is by no means guaranteed.

    The report, drawn up by Dutch conservative MEP Camiel Eurlings,
    also slams Ankara on a deteriorating human rights record and a slow-
    down in reforms.

    "It is important that the reforms be given impetus from within the
    country by the authorities themselves and are not merely the result
    of pressure from outside Turkey," EU lawmakers stressed.

    Referring to growing public unease at the EU's eastward expansion,
    the report highlights that the bloc's "capacity to absorb Turkey while
    maintaining the momentum of integration is an important consideration."

    Euro MPs also urged Turkey to bring its penal code in line with
    European standards for freedom of expression.

    They said that Ankara must abolish clauses such as article 301 under
    which insulting the state and its institutions is considered an
    offence which could lead to a sentence of three years in prison.

    In addition, Euro MPs criticised Turkey for not respecting women's
    rights and for the strong influence of the military in public life.

    EU lawmakers in the past have never vetoed any accession bid.

    However, the parliament's biggest and most influential conservative
    group favours a so-called "privileged partnership" with Turkey.

    The bloc's Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn on Tuesday pressed
    Ankara for "a more resolute reform process", adding that he was
    getting tired of having to repeat himself on human rights issues.

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso earlier this week
    put a damper on the hopes of Croatia, Turkey and others of joining the
    bloc, saying that the EU had to resolve the status of its embattled
    constitution before it could accept any more new members.

    The commission last week said it would release on November 8 a regular
    assessment on whether Turkey had made progress in reforms to qualify
    for EU membership.

    The EU's executive is also expected to suggest in its report what
    the bloc should do if Ankara misses the EU's December 2006 deadline
    on Cyprus.

    Turkey began negotiations aimed at EU membership last year. Talks
    are expected to take up to 15 years.
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