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ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Kalea=F0as=FD=3A?= Article 301 Poisons Turkey-EU

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  • ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Kalea=F0as=FD=3A?= Article 301 Poisons Turkey-EU

    KALEAðASý: ARTICLE 301 POISONS TURKEY-EU TIES
    Yonca Poyraz DoÐan

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 30 2007

    Turkey's leading business club's Brussels delegate said the new
    government should immediately act on amending the penal code to
    change Article 301, used to prosecute writers and journalists for
    insulting Turkishness, before the European Commission presents its
    country progress report in November.

    TUSÝAD Brussels representative Bahadýr Kaleaðasý says the new Turkish
    government should immediately act on amending the penal code to change
    article 301.

    Bahadýr Kaleaðasý, Brussels representative for the Turkish
    Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (TUSÝAD) said changing
    the notorious Article 301 should be a priority for the government.In
    Ýstanbul for meetings, Kaleaðasý yesterday added: "Article 301 of the
    Turkish Penal Code harms Turkey in every way. The fanatic Armenian
    and Greek lobbies, the PKK [outlawed separatist terrorist Kurdistan
    Workers' Party] lobbies and fundamentalist Christian groups of Europe
    that want to benefit from Turkey's weaknesses all gained by keeping
    the article intact. It poisons Turkey's relations with the EU."

    In last year's country progress report, the commission strongly
    criticized Turkey for undermining its EU membership talks by
    slowing the pace of reform on human rights as it condemned Ankara
    for failing to amend Article 301 of its penal code. The legislation
    used to prosecute Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel Prize-winning author, for
    insulting Turkishness, along with many other writers and journalists
    for "expression of nonviolent opinion," as the commission put it.

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso congratulated
    President Abdullah Gul after his election Tuesday, saying this
    "provides an opportunity to give fresh, immediate and positive impetus
    to the accession process to the European Union through progress in
    a number of key areas."

    Turkey was made an official candidate to join the 27-nation bloc in
    October 2005 during Gul's tenure as foreign minister. But its long
    quest to join has been dogged by problems, in part due to its slow
    progress on democratic and judicial reforms.

    After taking the presidential oath in Parliament Tuesday to become
    the country's 11th president, he told lawmakers: "It is imperative
    for our country that we carry out the political and economic reforms
    geared toward EU membership more resolutely. The political climate
    in Europe may always change."

    Among the other areas of weaknesses that Kaleaðasý said the commission
    took note of are intolerance toward non-Muslims, tension between the
    military and the civilians, a perception that religious coverings
    of women seem to be criteria in bureaucracy appointments and
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink's murder.

    Asked by Today's Zaman if there have been complaints by the Turkish
    side to the commission regarding such appointments, he said: "Yes,
    there have been complaints. Before secularism was seen as restricting
    individual freedoms but now they ask if Turkey is going toward the
    opposite direction. There are questions whether or not Turkey will
    ever find the middle ground to solve this issue."

    The author of "The Turkish Star in the European Galaxy," Kaleaðasý
    said the European Union is now watching the Turkish government to
    see how it will act on its words to protect secularism.

    Nevertheless, the Western media still wrongly label the AK Party as
    "Islamist" and the government needs a serious communications strategy
    to get rid of that erroneous branding, Kaleaðasý said: "The label
    'Islamist' has been strongly associated in Europe with a theocratic
    regime like that of Iran. As party officials have repeated several
    times, the AK Party is a conservative democratic party."

    There are areas in which Turkey should make demands from the EU
    as well, Kaleaðasý said, stressing the visa problems that Turkish
    citizens face before visiting European Union countries, and said the
    Turkish government should develop a full strategy to further prevent
    insult to the Turkish Republic.

    "The visa problem is a foreign policy problem. Turkish citizens have
    been insulted and so has the Turkish Republic. None of the governments
    have perceived the issue like that before, and they have not held
    meetings in European capitals to end that offense," he said.

    "There might be justified reasons for the application of visas, and
    we know that some people might be unwanted visitors in Europe, but a
    person who applied for a visa and passed all the procedures and was
    given a visa should be given a visa for a longer period of time --
    like 10 years -- not for only a couple of weeks or for a few days --
    the length of a conference that the person will attend."

    Kaleaðasý also said the European Union should consult with Turkey in
    starting trade negotiations with third parties because the Turkish
    government has been in a customs union with the EU since 1995.

    --Boundary_(ID_bxfR5cubyHTW8yufTgNNgg)--
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