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ANKARA: PACE president calls for reforms on free speech,Minority Rts

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  • ANKARA: PACE president calls for reforms on free speech,Minority Rts

    Turkish Daily News , Turkey
    Jan 15 2008


    PACE president calls for reforms on free speech, minority rights
    Tuesday, January 15, 2008

    Linden pays a farewell visit to Turkey ahead of next week's
    presidential elections at PACE when Turkey's future judge in the
    European Court of Human Rights will also be elected

    ANKARA - TDN Parliament Bureau


    The president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe (PACE) yesterday urged Turkey to press ahead with reforms and
    pay more attention to freedom of expression and minority rights - two
    areas that await further improvement if the country is to proceed on
    its thorny road toward the European Union.

    `I am one of the biggest supporters of Turkey's EU membership as
    long as Turkey sticks to its commitments,' Rene van der Linden told
    reporters following a meeting with Parliament Speaker Köksal Toptan.
    He warned Turkey to pay much more attention to the much-criticized
    article 301 of the Turkish penal code that makes it a crime to insult
    Turkish identity.

    The contentious article has landed a string of intellectuals in
    court due to denigrating ''Turkishness'' and mostly for comments on
    the alleged genocide of the Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    Linden also urged the Turkish government and Parliament to improve
    minority rights. `I am sure that you, the new Parliament and the new
    government will pay attention to these issues and contribute to their
    solution,' he told Toptan.



    Farewell visit

    In Ankara Linden met with President Abdullah Gül during a farewell
    visit ahead of the presidential elections at PACE set for Jan. 21,
    when Turkey's future judge in the Strasbourg-based European Court of
    Human Rights will also be elected.

    Turkey's previous list was rejected because of difference in
    capacity level among the three nominees. The current list includes
    Professor Ruþen Ergeç, who was previously nominated, Professor Iþýl
    Karakaþ and Associate Professor Ali Ulusoy. Ergeç still stands as a
    strong candidate to replace Turkey's respected judge Rýza Türmen but
    political observers say Karakaþ has also got a chance to be elected
    since European circles remain warm toward female candidates in order
    to foster equal representation.

    Some 20 current judges of the European court including Turkey's
    Türmen will be retired in February and will be replaced by new judges
    since Russian State Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament,
    did not approve Protocol No. 14 to the European Convention on Human
    Rights, which extends the terms of the judges from six to nine years.
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