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EU Report Criticizes Pace Of Reform In Turkey

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  • EU Report Criticizes Pace Of Reform In Turkey

    EU REPORT CRITICIZES PACE OF REFORM IN TURKEY
    By Stephen Castle

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Nov 1 2007

    BRUSSELS: In a new blow to Turkey's hopes of joining the European
    Union, an annual report has concluded that reforms there slowed
    in 2007 because of a constitutional crisis over the election of a
    president with an Islamic background.

    With attention distracted by tensions between the governing AK Party
    and the military over the election of Abdullah Gul, Turkey did too
    little to root out corruption, modernize its judiciary, reduce the
    power of the military and increase freedom of expression.

    The annual progress report compiled by the European Commission,
    is to be released next week as a new committee prepares to examine
    the future of the EU. The panel may try to determine where Europe's
    frontiers should lie and how much farther the bloc should expand.

    Public opinion across the EU is hardening against Turkey's membership
    bid and the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, leads a group of
    countries opposed to full EU membership for Turkey, preferring a
    looser association with Ankara instead.

    Sarkozy proposed the creation of the new committee, which is scheduled
    to be approved by EU heads of government next month. Turkey fears
    the panel will kill off their membership bid.

    Eager to limit the damage to Turkish accession hopes, a draft of the
    commission's annual report stresses Turkey's strategic importance as a
    "unique interface between the West and the Muslim world," a diplomatic
    and military partner and an energy hub.

    But it also makes clear that the implementation of reforms was "uneven"
    and "has slowed down since 2005." The number of people prosecuted for
    freedom of expression doubled from 2005 to 2006, corruption remains
    rife and Turkey was found to be in breach of the European Convention
    on Human Rights in 330 cases.

    This year the military spoke out against Gul's candidacy for president,
    one of the central pillars of the secular Turkish state.

    The crisis prompted parliamentary elections that returned the AK Party
    to power, allowing Gul - whose wife wears a head scarf - to win the
    presidency through a parliamentary vote. Although the military "made
    statements beyond its remit," parliamentary elections were conducted
    properly, the draft report says.

    "Turkey now needs to renew the momentum of political reforms," the
    document says. It calls for significant further efforts on freedom
    of expression, civilian control of the military, increased rights
    for non-Muslims, the fight against corruption and judicial reforms.

    Charles Grant, director of the Center for European Reform in London,
    said the document comes at a difficult time for Turkey. "A number
    of governments that have been pro-Turkey are now backpedaling or,
    like Denmark, keeping their heads down and leaving it to Britain,
    Sweden and the commission to argue for Turkey" Grant said.

    He added: "The best prospect for Turkey at the moment is just to keep
    going and hope that the climate in Europe changes, which it might do."

    Eight of the 35 "chapters" for negotiations with Turkey are now frozen
    because of its refusal to open its ports to ships from Cyprus.

    There were fears that Sarkozy would block talks on all other issues
    but France has hinted that it will stop the opening of only four
    other chapters.

    The commission's study underlines the amount of work needed to meet EU
    membership requirements. Although the document says that the outcome of
    the spring crisis "reaffirmed the primacy of the democratic process,"
    it also notes that the military took positions on issues outside its
    remit. "Full civilian supervision of the military and parliamentary
    oversight of defense expenditures still need to be established,"
    the paper says.

    The document adds that there has been "little progress" in the fight
    against corruption, which it describes as "widespread."

    The number of prosecutions of journalists, intellectuals and human
    rights activists for expressing nonviolent opinions is on the rise.

    The number of people prosecuted almost doubled in 2006 from 2005 and
    there were further increases in 2007.

    More than half of the cases were brought under the Turkish Penal Code
    and many of those under article 301, which makes it an offense to
    insult "Turkishness." Together with the murder of a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist, Hrant Dink, the prosecutions have helped create a climate
    of self-censorship, the draft document says. Dink was killed in
    Istanbul on Jan. 19. His views on the Ottoman Turkish massacres of
    Armenians in the era of World War I had angered Turkish nationalists.

    The number of reported torture and ill-treatment cases has declined,
    though they still occur, especially before suspects are detained.

    Concerns remain about the independence and impartiality of the
    judiciary, the report says.

    >From October 2006 to October 2007 the European Court of Human Rights
    delivered 330 judgments finding that Turkey had violated at least
    one article of the European Convention on Human Rights.

    The draft takes an even-handed approach on the Kurdish issue saying
    that Turkey made "no progress in the area of cultural rights." But
    it notes that the PKK separatist group is on the EU's terrorist list
    and talks of a "further deterioration of the situation" in terms of
    attacks by the PKK and other terrorist groups.

    The final version of the document may make a plea to Turkey to avoid
    disproportionate retaliation.

    The report, which covers the whole EU enlargement process, also says
    that Croatia might be able to join the bloc by the end of the decade
    if it speeds up the reform of its judiciary and the fight against
    corruption.

    And it highlights concerns about the Balkans, including organized
    crime, ethnic tensions and corruption, arguing that the measures
    being taken are inadequate.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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