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Turkey Urged To Protect Religious Freedoms

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  • Turkey Urged To Protect Religious Freedoms

    TURKEY URGED TO PROTECT RELIGIOUS FREEDOMS

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 19, 2007 Thursday

    Current EU president Germany urged Ankara on Thursday to take
    measures to protect religious freedoms after one German and two
    Turkish protestants were killed in the east of the country.

    The appeal followed a meeting in Istanbul of the ambassadors of the
    27 European Union member countries to discuss the gruesome murders
    in Malatya on Wednesday in the latest attack against minorities in
    EU-hopeful Turkey.

    "These despicable murders were strongly condemned and all member
    countries expressed sympathy to the families of the victims, who
    include a German national," German Ambassador Eckhart Cuntz said in
    a statement.

    "We see the murders as an attack not only against individuals, but
    also against the principles of freedom and tolerance," he said.

    The assailants tied the three men up and cut their throats at the
    offices of a publishing house, which belongs to Turkey's tiny
    Protestant community and published Bibles and other books on
    Christianity.

    "I believe that Turkey will guarantee the safety and particularly the
    religious freedoms of both Turkish and foreign nationals," Cuntz said.

    He called for support for "the implementation of reforms that aim at
    (ensuring) a modern, open and tolerant society" in Turkey.

    The EU has often pressed Ankara to guarantee the freedoms of its
    tiny non-Muslim communities, which consist mostly of Orthodox Greeks,
    Armenians and Jews concentrated in Istanbul.

    Wednesday's murders followed the killings of Italian Roman Catholic
    priest Andrea Santoro in the northern city of Trabzon in February 2006
    and of prominent ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul
    in January.

    The attack raised concerns that nationalism and hostility towards
    non-Muslims is on the rise in Turkey, which has long argued that its
    EU membership would build a bridge between East and West.
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