Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: EU: Malatya Another Incident In Series Of Anti-Reform Provoc

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: EU: Malatya Another Incident In Series Of Anti-Reform Provoc

    EU: MALATYA ANOTHER INCIDENT IN SERIES OF ANTI-REFORM PROVOCATIONS

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 20 2007

    The European Union believes the killing of three people in Malatya
    is yet another provocation by those who want the reform process to
    grind to a halt.

    While the EU Commission has condemned the killing very strongly,
    as did the Council of Europe and several MEPs, it thinks the motive
    behind the killings was to stop the reform process that has deepened
    since the AK Party came to power. A senior official from the EU
    Commission told Today's Zaman that those responsible were those who
    were against the reform process, human rights and the deepening and
    strengthening of Turkish democracy. Drawing attention to the murders
    of priest Andrea Santoro and Turkish journalist of Armenian origin
    Hrant Dink, the official said it was no coincidence that Christians
    were targeted in all three incidents.

    Meanwhile, Joost Lagendijk of the European Parliament's Turkey
    delegation, visiting the nearby southeastern Anatolian province of
    Diyarbakýr, said the killings would send a negative message to Europe
    and that there was paranoia about missionaries in Turkey. "The public
    reaction to be shown against these murders is actually important,"
    Lagendijk said, while also calling on the Turkish government to deliver
    a call for tolerance. "Europe will perceive the killings to mean that
    those who attempt to seek converts to other faiths in Turkey will
    face a similar fate. It is very important for the government to appeal
    for the acceptance of different religions and ethnic backgrounds."

    In Seoul, Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi said murders in Malatya
    would not be helpful for Turkey's EU process. "I call on the Turkish
    government to be diligent regarding democratic rules concerning
    living together. The Turkish government should not let these kinds
    of tragedies to change the political line that they have pursued,"
    Prodi said. The right-wing opposition parties in Italy, meanwhile,
    urged Prodi to inform the Italian Parliament concerning the incident
    in Malatya.

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier condemned the attack
    "in the strongest terms," and said he expected Turkish authorities
    would "do everything to clear up this crime completely and bring
    those responsible to justice."

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrat Party, which
    opposes Turkey's bid to join the EU, said the attacks that included
    a German citizen showed the country's shortcomings in protecting
    religious freedoms. "The Turkish state is still far from the freedom
    of religion that marks Europe," the party's general secretary, Ronald
    Pofalla, said in a statement. Turkey is under pressure to guarantee
    the protection and freedom of non-Muslim minorities as part of its
    efforts to join the EU, but a recent series of attacks has raised
    concerns that nationalism and anti-Christian hostility are on the rise.

    In February 2006, Father Santoro, was shot dead as he prayed in his
    church in the northern city of Trabzon. A teenager was convicted of
    the murder and jailed for nearly 19 years. In January, journalist
    Hrant Dink, a prominent member of Turkey's Armenian community, was
    gunned down in an Istanbul street. A 17-year-old, detained along with
    11 other suspected ultra-nationalists, confessed to the killing.

    SELCUK GULTAÞLI, Today's Zaman with wires BRUSSELS, ANKARA

    --Boundary_(ID_nXdOhzTQs3qLLbdY3OGa6g)--
Working...
X