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EU Urges 'Substantial Changes' To Turkish Law Restricting Freedom Of

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  • EU Urges 'Substantial Changes' To Turkish Law Restricting Freedom Of

    EU URGES 'SUBSTANTIAL CHANGES' TO TURKISH LAW RESTRICTING FREEDOM OF SPEECH

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Oct 24 2007

    STRASBOURG, France: The European Union on Wednesday urged Turkey
    to make "substantial changes" to a law restricting the freedom of
    speech and press ahead with other reforms crucial for its bid to join
    the bloc.

    Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk and slain ethnic Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink are among those who have been prosecuted under
    the controversial Article 301 of the Turkish penal code that make it
    a crime to insult Turkish identity or the country's institutions.

    "We regret the lack of progress that has been made, ... There have
    to be substantial changes to Article 301 and also to other articles
    worded in similarly vague terms," said Portugal's European affairs
    minister Manuel Lobo Antunes, speaking on behalf of the EU.

    Antunes spoke to the European Parliament ahead of a Nov. 6 report by
    the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, on the progress in
    Turkey's membership bid. The European Parliament passed a resolution
    Wednesday that also calls for deeper reforms.

    Turkish troops shelled Kurdish rebel positions across the border in
    Iraq after an ambush that killed 12 soldiers Sunday. The EU condemned
    attacks by the Kurdish PKK organization - which it considers a
    terrorist group - but reiterated its call on Turkey to resolve the
    issue in cooperation with Iraq and by respecting international law.

    Pamuk and Dink had both been prosecuted under Article 301 for comments
    about the mass killings of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th
    century, an issue that has also strained Turkey's relations with the
    United States after a U.S. House of Representatives panel approved
    a resolution labeling the killings as genocide.

    Turkey's EU membership talks began in 2005, but human rights, a
    dispute over divided Cyprus and other issues have slowed the bid. EU
    enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn said negotiations in two new policy
    areas could be opened "in the coming weeks."

    Turkey must implement EU legislation into its national rulebooks in
    35 negotiating "chapters," a process expected to take years.

    Antunes, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, also urged
    Turkey to recognize Cyprus and speed up the improvement of religious,
    cultural and women's rights in Turkey. Better democratic oversight of
    the country's powerful military forces - which have vowed to safeguard
    Turkish secularism - was also needed, he said.

    Cyprus has been divided between a Greek Cypriot south and a
    Turkish-occupied north since 1974, when Turkey invaded after an
    abortive Athens-backed coup by supporters of union with Greece. A
    U.N. peace blueprint was approved by Turkish Cypriots, but rejected by
    Greek Cypriots in 2004, which meant Cyprus joined the EU as a divided
    nation - with only the Greek Cypriot south enjoying EU benefits.

    Turkey is under intense pressure from the EU to allow Greek Cypriot
    planes and vessels to use Turkish ports and airports, but Ankara
    has said it will not agree to any concessions on Cyprus until the EU
    keeps to a promise to end the isolation of Turkish Cypriots.

    The EU assembly said that Turkey's refusal to comply with the
    commitments made when it opened its accession talks with the EU
    "will continue to affect seriously the process of negotiations."

    But the parliamentary resolution did not address the issue of the
    World War I-era killing of 1.5 million Armenians.

    "Quite a few feel it was genocide - but in the current situation we
    don't think it's a subject that should be addressed in a way that would
    negatively affect our relations with Turkey," said Dimitris Komodoros,
    spokesman for the Socialist group in the European Parliament.
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