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Top EU Officials In Turkey Amid Political Tensions

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  • Top EU Officials In Turkey Amid Political Tensions

    TOP EU OFFICIALS IN TURKEY AMID POLITICAL TENSIONS

    Turkish Press
    April 10 2008

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso arrived for talks
    here Thursday as simmering political tensions pose a new threat to
    Turkey's struggling bid to join the European Union.

    Barroso, accompanied by Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, is
    expected to urge Ankara to re-focus on reforms demanded by the EU
    when he meets President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan and parliamentary opposition leaders later Thursday.

    The visit comes as a pending court case threatens Erdogan's ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP) with closure on charges of
    seeking to undermine Turkey's secular order and replace it with an
    Islamist regime.

    EU officials have slammed the prospect of a ban on the AKP as
    undemocratic, Rehn warning that Turkey's accession talks could be
    derailed.

    The AKP, the offshoot of a now-banned Islamist movement, has disowned
    its religious roots and pledged commitment to democracy, launching
    a series of reforms that led to the start of Turkey's EU accession
    talks in 2005. It was re-elected to a second term in July with almost
    47 percent of the vote.

    AKP supporters see the court case as a fresh attack against their
    party by hardline secularists, whose prominent members include senior
    judges, the military and some academics.

    Critics, however, argue that the AKP aims to advance its Islamist
    ambitions under the guise of improving religious freedoms in line with
    EU norms and point at the abolition of a ban on the Islamic headscarf
    in universities and the prohibition of alcohol in restaurants run by
    AKP municipalities.

    Many Turks are frustrated with what they see as inadequate EU support
    for the country's much-cherished secular system.

    EU officials are "expected to emphasise the issue of secularism and
    criticise some AKP moves with the same sincerity with which they
    emphasise democracy," columnist Semih Idiz wrote Thursday in the
    daily Milliyet.

    Under fire for slackening its EU reform drive, the AKP moved to mend
    its credibility on the eve of Barroso's visit, submitting to parliament
    a proposal to amend a law the EU has denounced as a threat to freedom
    of speech in Turkey.

    The proposal aims to soften Article 301 of the penal code, which
    calls for up to three years in jail for "insulting Turkishness" and
    has been used mainly against people contesting Turkey's official line
    on the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

    The provision has landed dozens of intellectuals, among them 2006
    Nobel literature laureate Orhan Pamuk, in court.

    Some -- including slain ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink --
    were convicted, but their sentences were suspended and no one has
    been jailed so far.

    Turkey has so far opened talks on only six of the 35 policy chapters EU
    candidates must complete before accession. Brussels froze negotiations
    on eight chapters in 2006 over Turkey's refusal to grant trade
    privileges to EU member Cyprus, which Ankara does not recognise.

    Opposition to Turkey's accession by some EU members, including France
    and Germany, has also slowed progress of the talks.
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