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Turks Favour Religious, Ethnic Pluralism: Poll

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  • Turks Favour Religious, Ethnic Pluralism: Poll

    TURKS FAVOUR RELIGIOUS, ETHNIC PLURALISM: POLL

    Agence France Presse -- English
    March 19, 2007 Monday 11:43 AM GMT

    Most Turks believe the state should help preserve different religious
    and ethnic groups in the face of rising nationalism, according to a
    poll published Monday.

    The poll by the Konda institution published in the Milliyet daily
    showed that 66.4 percent believe the state should support efforts
    to protect ethnic differences as opposed to 33.6 percent who say it
    should not.

    A total of 76.4 percent said the state should be involved in efforts
    to preserve different religious groups while 23.6 percent said it
    should not.

    The poll, conducted among 48,000 people countrywide in October, comes
    at a time of intense debate over surging nationalism following the
    murder of an ethnic Armenian journalist by a suspected ultranationalist
    grouping.

    Turkey is home to tiny minorities of Jews, Armenians and Greeks,
    as well as a sizeable Kurdish community in the southeast, where
    separatist rebels have waged a bloody 22-year campaign for self-rule.

    Improving the freedoms of its Kurdish and non-Muslim minorities is
    one of the key elements in Turkey's troubled accession talks with
    the European Union.

    Analysts say nationalist feelings are on the rise in Turkey, and
    attribute this mainly to EU pressure for change.

    Many Turks fear the government is making too many concessions to
    Brussels and that Europeans do not really want a mainly Muslim,
    relatively poor country of some 70 million people in their union.

    Last year, the EU partly froze Turkey's membership talks over its
    failure to grant trade privileges to Cyprus, an EU member it does
    not recognise.
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