Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Italy Declares Turkey 'Unfit for EU' After Malatia Slaying

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

  • Italy Declares Turkey 'Unfit for EU' After Malatia Slaying

    Italy Declares Turkey 'Unfit for EU' After Malatia Slaying

    20 Apil 07

    GOME (AFP)--Italy's opposition today demanded the Government block
    Turkey's European Union bid, saying the killing of three Christians
    at a Bible publishing house proved the country could not control
    violent Islamists.

    "Yet another attack against Christian values. Turkey should forget
    about the European Union," Massimo Polledri, a senator from the
    anti-immigrant Northern League, said.

    The three Christians, including a German, were found with their
    throats slit yesterday at the Zirve publishing house in Malatya,
    a city in the predominantly Muslim country's southeast.

    Alessandra Mussolini, a parliamentarian who is granddaughter of
    Italy's wartime dictator, urged Italians to sign her petition to
    the EU condemning the killings and stating the "refusal of Italian
    citizens to allow Turkey into the European Union".

    "After this the question of Turkey's EU entry cannot be just a
    bureaucratic decision," she said, also referring to last year's
    killing of an Italian missionary priest in Turkey.

    Ankara began membership talks in October 2005 but the EU has frozen
    negotiations in eight of the 35 policy areas because of a row over
    Cyprus.

    Opinion polls in predominantly Catholic Italy have showed that many
    people oppose Turkey in the EU because of its Muslim background and
    human rights record.

    "The Government must send a clear signal to the Turkish Government
    - that the violation of religious freedom and human rights are
    incompatible with any hypothesis of Turkish membership in Europe,"
    said Luca Volonte, from the UDC party.

    She said Ankara tolerated "Islamist extremists... who see Christians
    as sacrificial animals whose throats should be slit".

    Prime Minister Romano Prodi, on a trip to Asia, said the killings
    "certainly will not help" Turkey's EU bid but that such incidents
    should not be allowed to influence "policy regarding long-term
    horizons".

    Prodi's comments were met with scorn by opposition parliamentarian
    Andrea Gibelli, who called them "chilling".

    The Northern League and the UDC called on the Government to address
    Parliament next week about its position on Turkey.

    A wave of nationalism has swept the secular but predominantly Sunni
    Muslim country over the past year.

    For many Turkish nationalists, missionaries are enemies of Turkey
    working to undermine its political and religious institutions.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X