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ANKARA: Minister says Turkey determined to pursue European objective

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  • ANKARA: Minister says Turkey determined to pursue European objective

    Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
    March 2 2007


    Turkish minister says Turkey determined to pursue European objective


    Brussels, 2 March: Turkey's chief European Union negotiator, Ali
    Babacan, renewed his country's determination [on] Friday [2 March] to
    pursue a long-desired goal to join the European club even [if] its
    leaders decided last year to partially freeze Ankara's accession
    talks.

    "Turkey has been willingly implementing reforms with an eye to its
    people's prosperity," he told a meeting of Brussels-based think-tank
    organization, Centre for European Policy.

    "There is still more to do and a long distance to travel," Turkish
    State Minister Babacan said. "But we are relentlessly working and we
    believe we will be ready for membership whenever the EU regains its
    self-confidence."

    EU leaders opted last December to partially freeze eight of 35 policy
    areas or chapters in Turkey's entry talks due to a ports dispute with
    the Greek Cypriot administration.

    The union further said that no chapters would be provisionally closed
    unless Turkey opened up to trade with Greek Cypriots, a key European
    demand, which Ankara said it would only comply if an economic embargo
    on Turkish Cypriots is lifted.

    Babacan said Turkey's EU membership would have "very positive global
    consequences".

    "Turkish accession will mean more than the joining of an additional
    member in the EU," he said.

    Babacan also expressed his government's discontent with Article 301
    of the Turkish Penal Code, saying that a cultural transformation and
    a mentality change were needed to overcome the problem.

    Article 301, which criminalizes "insult to state and Turkishness",
    was used to press charges against many intellectuals in Turkey,
    including country's Nobel-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk.

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was shot dead last
    January outside his newspaper offices in Istanbul, had also been
    sentenced to a six-month suspended prison term under the same
    article.
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