Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vatican Will Support Turkey For EU Membership Under Certain Conditio

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

  • Vatican Will Support Turkey For EU Membership Under Certain Conditio

    VATICAN WILL SUPPORT TURKEY FOR EU MEMBERSHIP UNDER CERTAIN CONDITIONS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    01.06.2007 18:19 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Vatican's Secretary of State has signaled
    that the Holy See will support Turkey's bid for membership in the
    European Union.

    Speaking to the Italian daily La Stampa, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
    said that "Turkey has come a long way" toward democracy and respect
    for human rights.

    The European community can accept the membership of an overwhelming
    Islamic society, he said, as long as "fundamental rules of
    cohabitation" are firmly in place.

    Cardinal Bertone made his comments as the world's leading Orthodox
    prelate, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople,
    pressed the Turkish government to recognize the autonomy of the
    Orthodox Church.

    Patriarch Bartholomew told a group of visiting German lawmakers that
    he had asked the Turkish government to overturn an existing rule that
    bars a non-Turk from being elected Patriarch of Constantinople. The
    Orthodox prelate suggested that Turkey adopt the policies of Egypt
    and Syria, which grant automatic citizenship to the patriarchs of
    Alexandria and Antioch. The Turkish government has not yet replied
    to his request, Bartholomew said.

    Patriarch Bartholomew has been demanding greater respect for religious
    freedom in Turkey, and critics of the Turkish bid for EU membership
    have pointed to the Patriarch's complaints that Christians do not
    receive equal treatment under Turkish law.

    Cardinal Bertone acknowledged that the Turkish government resists
    recognition of Christianity and Judaism. Turkey, he pointed out,
    is an officially secular country, in which "secularism is exalted
    not as mere secularity but as a system of belief." This ideology
    of militant secularism, he added, would clash with the Christian
    heritage that dominates European culture. Nonetheless, the cardinal
    said that honest dialogue could allow for Turkish participation in
    the European community.

    Prior to his election as Pope Benedict XVI, then-Cardinal Joseph
    Ratzinger expressed serious concerns about the prospect that an
    Islamic nation would join the European Union. But during his trip to
    Turkey last November the Pontiff eased his stance, and Turkish Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan told reporters that during a private meeting,
    the Pontiff had said that he would support Turkey's application for
    EU membership.

    Vatican officials did not confirm that report, but said that the Holy
    See would "look favorably" on Turkey's membership drive as long as
    the Ankara government respected the principles of religious freedom
    and equal justice under law, Catholic World News reports.
Working...
X