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  • ANKARA: Regional acts no mask for reforms

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Nov 28 2008



    Regional acts no mask for reforms


    ANKARA - Turkey has been told by a European official the foreign
    policy it has initiated in the region does not change the need for
    reforms and repeated concern over the slow progress being made in
    improving freedoms of expression and granting rights to the Alevis and
    Kurds.

    "The heart of EU accession is not strategy, but democracy," said
    Joost Lagendijk, the head of the Turkish-European Union Joint
    Parliamentary Committee.

    The Turkish-EU Joint Parliamentary Committee meeting began in the
    capital and will continue today. European parliamentarians visiting
    Turkey on a fact-finding mission said there was a visible stagnation
    in the political criteria required for full membership of the EU.

    Lagendijk said the European parliament's forthcoming report on Turkey
    would praise positive developments in Turkish-Armenian relations and
    the Turkish president's landmark visit to Armenia in September.

    He also welcomed direct contact between Ankara and the Iraqi Kurdish
    leaders but stated Turkey's increasing strategic importance could not
    be a substitute to domestic reform.

    European support for Kurdish television Lagendijk welcomed the Kurdish
    broadcast, which will start on Turkish Radio and Television, or TRT,
    for 12 hours each day as of Jan. 1, as an important step and expressed
    the wish to see progress on the rights of Alevis.

    In the meantime, Lagendijk also met with Freedom and Solidarity Party,
    or Ã-DP, leader, Ufuk Uras. The European parliamentarian said he
    had observed President Abdullah Gül's determination over the EU
    process, while Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an was
    pragmatic about the matter, learned the Hürriyet Daily News &
    Economic Review.

    Turkey's State Minister Mehmet Å?imÅ?ek also attended the
    meeting and responded to questions from the Greek Cypriot member of
    the European parliament, Marios Matsakis, who complained about the
    government's defense expenditure. Å?imÅ?ek replied if
    Turkey became a member of the EU, the country would not be in need of
    such a big army.

    Dink issue unresolved
    Late Wednesday, the French ambassador to Ankara, Bernard Emie, whose
    country is currently holding the term presidency of the EU, gave a
    reception on the occasion of the visit of members of the European
    parliament's human rights sub-committee and the foreign affairs
    committee.

    Helen Flautre, head of the European parliament's human rights
    sub-committee, expressed curiosity about the content of the report
    drafted by the Prime Ministry Inspection Board concerning the
    assassination of the Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink. "We
    would like to learn the truth about the assassination," she said.

    She also touched on the government's plans to build an additional
    prison and transfer six inmates to the İmralı island off
    Istanbul where the leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, or
    PKK, Abdullah Ã-calan, is imprisoned. Flautre said the decisions of
    the European Court of Human Rights must be fully implemented. "This is
    important for both Ã-calan and other inmates," she said and added
    long-term isolation meant ill treatment and that if the Turkish
    government decided to end the isolation, that was a good thing.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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