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ANKARA: Turkey Becomes Very Open, Very Fast, Says Country's Chief E.

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Becomes Very Open, Very Fast, Says Country's Chief E.

    TURKEY BECOMES VERY OPEN, VERY FAST, SAYS COUNTRY'S CHIEF E.U. NEGOTIATOR

    Turkish Press, MI
    Feb 6 2007

    ANKARA - European Union hopeful Turkey`s Chief Negotiator Ali Babacan
    praised his country`s rapid transformation toward openness.

    "Turkey has become very open, very fast," Babacan told Christopher
    Power in a commentary published in the "Business Week".

    The assassination of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink "looks
    like an anachronism," Babacan stated. "It`s not compatible with the
    open society we are looking for."

    Dink was shot dead on January 19th, outside the offices of his Agos
    weekly in Istanbul.

    Babacan also underlined that "a mental reform" was still needed in
    Turkey and that certain things "were not changing overnight."

    -TRANSFORMATION OF TURKEY-

    Christopher Power said in his commentary that Turkey has striven
    to come up to EU standards of openness to prepare its bid to join
    the Union.

    "A whole new media web has sprung up in the Eurasian nation of 75
    million people, where almost none existed before," Power wrote.

    "From a single state-owned TV station, more than 300 channels have
    emerged. Eleven hundred radio stations crowd the airwaves. Every
    private school is now linked to the Internet, and the government is
    distributing 400,000 PCs to pupils."

    Power cited other dynamics in Turkey`s transformation toward openness:
    "The Governor`s Office in Istanbul has dispatched thousands of Turks
    to work alongside civil servants and others in the EU states to learn
    the way of life of the Western societies," he said.

    Power also stated that Turkey has opened its economy to a surprising
    degree.

    "In the last five years exports have soared from $36 billion to $86
    billion. Foreign direct investment has zoomed from $1 billion to $18
    billion. GDP growth has averaged 7 percent," Power said.

    "But Turkey does not want to lose its economic gains in an atmosphere
    of political murders and terror fomented by a small minority. It
    wants the payoffs of globalization, not the blowback," Power added.
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