GREEK PRESIDENT WARNS TURKEY TO RESPECT KURDISH RIGHTS
Agence France Presse -- English
May 17, 2006 Wednesday 3:43 PM GMT
Greek President Carolos Papoulia warned Turkey on Wednesday that it
must respect human rights, notably those of the Kurds, if it wants
closer ties with the European Union.
"I don't think that Turkey will be able to have closer ties with the
EU by violating fundamental rights; this is true for the Kurds but
not them alone," he said in a speech at the European Parliament.
"These are problems that are the responsibility of the Turkish
government," he said, adding that the EU has "laid out a framework
of principles within which Turkey must operate."
Turkey was accepted in October as a candidate to join the EU but
no guarantee was given that it will be made a member once it has
undertaken reform to bring into line with the bloc, a process likely
to take more than a decade.
The EU has long pressed Ankara to grant equal cultural freedoms to its
large Kurdish minority -- estimated at about 12 million people -- as
well as smaller, non-Muslim communities of Greeks, Armenians and Jews.
Agence France Presse -- English
May 17, 2006 Wednesday 3:43 PM GMT
Greek President Carolos Papoulia warned Turkey on Wednesday that it
must respect human rights, notably those of the Kurds, if it wants
closer ties with the European Union.
"I don't think that Turkey will be able to have closer ties with the
EU by violating fundamental rights; this is true for the Kurds but
not them alone," he said in a speech at the European Parliament.
"These are problems that are the responsibility of the Turkish
government," he said, adding that the EU has "laid out a framework
of principles within which Turkey must operate."
Turkey was accepted in October as a candidate to join the EU but
no guarantee was given that it will be made a member once it has
undertaken reform to bring into line with the bloc, a process likely
to take more than a decade.
The EU has long pressed Ankara to grant equal cultural freedoms to its
large Kurdish minority -- estimated at about 12 million people -- as
well as smaller, non-Muslim communities of Greeks, Armenians and Jews.