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Turkey needs reform before more EU talks

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  • Turkey needs reform before more EU talks

    The Associated Press
    September 27, 2006 Wednesday 4:30 PM GMT

    Turkey needs reform before more EU talks

    By JAN SLIVA, Associated Press Writer

    STRASBOURG France


    The European Parliament on Wednesday warned Turkey that its refusal
    to allow Greek Cypriot ships and planes to enter its ports could halt
    its accession talks with the European Union.

    In an evaluation report, the EU assembly said that Turkey's progress
    in the area of freedom of expression is "far from satisfactory", and
    that no progress has been made lately in addressing difficulties
    faced by ethnic minorities, such as Kurds.

    Ankara is also awaiting a progress report from the EU's executive
    commission.

    While the lawmakers dropped their demand that Turkey must acknowledge
    the killings of Armenians around the time of World War I as genocide
    before it can join the EU, they said it was "indispensable" for
    Turkey to come to terms with and recognize its past.

    They also urged Turkey to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia
    and open the land border with its eastern neighbor.

    Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killed in an organized genocidal campaign by Ottoman Turks, and have
    pushed for recognition of the killings as genocide by the 25-nation
    EU and by other nations. Turkey vehemently denies the killing were
    genocide.

    Top EU officials hinted in July that entry talks with Turkey begun in
    October are likely to stall because of Ankara's continuing failure to
    recognize Cyprus or allow in its ships and airplanes.

    The European Parliament committee report warns that the "lack of
    progress in this regard will have serious implications for the
    negotiation process and could even bring it to a halt."

    The parliament's report was approved a day after Romania and Bulgaria
    were given the go-ahead to join the EU on Jan. 1, 2007, raising the
    number of EU members to 27. The EU has warned the bloc would not
    accept more members until it resolves the future of its stalled
    constitution.

    The European Commission is to present its next evaluation of Turkey's
    reforms on Nov. 8. The European Parliament must give its assent
    before every EU enlargement.
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