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  • EU wannabe Turkey rapped over rights, media freedoms

    Agence France Presse, France
    Oct 14 2009


    EU wannabe Turkey rapped over rights, media freedoms

    by Roddy Thomson
    BRUSSELS, Oct 14 2009


    The European Union rapped Turkey over its rights record and voiced
    serious concern over pressure on the media Wednesday as it issued its
    annual report on countries wanting to join the 27-nation club.

    Ankara was praised for reaching a deal with Armenia over a "genocide"
    row going back to World War I -- but criticised for refusal to open
    its ports to Cyprus as demanded under an EU customs accord.

    The European Commission called for negotiations to start with
    Macedonia -- long stymied by a row with Greece over its name -- and
    also proposed extending visa-free travel in Europe to Kosovo.

    With Croatia nearing the "finishing line" on its bid to join, Iceland
    added a "new dimension" to its efforts to overtake the remaining
    wannabees -- Albania, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Montenegro and Serbia.

    But it was the way Brussels assailed Turkey -- the biggest candidate,
    a mainly Muslim country whose future membership is opposed by
    heavyweights France and Germany -- that caught eyes and ears.

    "Turkey has a key role in terms of security of energy supplies," said
    Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, who also welcomed efforts to
    resolve internal tensions with ethnic Kurds.

    However, he said Ankara needed to "revitalise" reform in key areas of
    "freedom of expression" and "women's rights."

    Turkey last month slapped a 1.75-billion-euro (2.6 billion dollars)
    fine on opposition press group Dogan.

    While Brussels praised the opening of a national Kurdish-language TV
    channel, Rehn said the EU had "serious concerns" over "political
    pressure" being applied on the media.

    "If a tax fine is worth the annual turnover of the company, it is
    quite a strong sanction," he said. "It may not only be a fiscal
    sanction, it feels also like a political sanction."

    The commission also expressed concern over a deep rift at the highest
    levels in Turkish public life after charges were brought against
    military officers accused of belonging to a clandestine network called
    Ergenekon.

    But the report underlined that a "lack of dialogue and spirit of
    compromise between political parties is detrimental to the pursuit of
    reforms."

    On overcrowded prisons, it warned that despite Ankara's stated
    "zero-tolerance" policy, "allegations of torture and ill-treatment,
    and impunity for perpetrators are still a cause for concern."

    Regarding women, it said "domestic violence, honour killings and early
    and forced marriages remain serious problems in some areas."

    Turkey began accession negotiations in 2005, but has so far opened
    just 11 of the 35 chapters that candidates must complete, with only
    one even provisionally closed. Eight others have been frozen since
    2006 over the customs dispute with EU member Cyprus.

    In Ankara, the Turkish minister responsible for EU relations said the
    report was generally "positive and even-handed."

    Croatia, in pole position to join next, has to focus on judicial
    reform and war crimes tribunal cooperation, the commission said.

    An agreement over a border row is due to be signed on October 23
    between Croatia and EU member Slovenia, which would unblock its last
    three chapters.

    Rehn, meanwhile, said the start of negotiations with Macedonia would
    be "a very strong encouragement to settle the name issue (with
    Greece)."

    The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia -- a candidate country since
    December 2005 -- was blocked from joining NATO in April 2008 and has
    also been blocked by Athens from opening EU negotiations.

    In Skopje, as thousands celebrated in the streets carrying Macedonian
    and EU flags, Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski said it was a
    "historic day."

    In an effort to speed reform in Kosovo, which declared independence
    from Serbia in February 2008 but is not recognised as a state by five
    EU nations, Brussels offered to "start work towards visa
    liberalisation" and "prepare trade relations" next year.

    Bosnia-Hercegovina, meanwhile, must first show it can "stand on its
    own feet" and "govern itself effectively."
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