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EU Presses Turkey for Quick Progress on Reform

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  • EU Presses Turkey for Quick Progress on Reform

    Javno.hr, Croatia
    Sept 8 2007


    EU Presses Turkey for Quick Progress on Reform

    The European Union pressed Turkey on Saturday for immediate progress
    to improve freedom of expression and religion.

    Reuters The European Union pressed Turkey on Saturday for immediate
    progress to improve freedom of expression and religion following the
    re-election of the pro-European AK party.

    But new Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan made clear there were no
    early plans to amend or abolish a penal code clause used to prosecute
    intellectuals and journalists, saying it would be addressed in a
    planned new constitution.

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said the EU candidate had
    overcome remarkably smoothly a political and institutional crisis
    unleashed in April when its powerful military warned it could
    intervene to defend Turkey's secular order.

    The armed forces' statement was seen as an attempt to block the
    election of former Islamist AK candidate Abdullah Gul as president.
    But the outcome was a sweeping victory for the AK party in early
    general elections in July, and Gul's election as president by the new
    parliament last week.

    "I don't only hope but I expect the government will immediately
    relaunch the reform process, especially as regards freedom of
    expression and religious freedom so that they can ... prove that they
    are making serious progress," Rehn told a news conference.

    He welcomed the fact that the new administration had put EU accession
    and the necessary reforms at the top of its agenda.

    Babacan refused to be pinned down on amending article 301 of the
    penal code, which punishes "insulting Turkishness" and has been used
    to prosecute writers who urged Turkey to face up to the mass killing
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915.

    "I don't want to talk about a specific article of a specific law
    right now, but we are now working on a new constitutional framework
    which is going to be in line with the Copenhagen criteria," he said,
    referring to the EU's membership conditions on democracy, human
    rights and the rule of law.

    EU officials have said that unless Turkey shows quick progress, it is
    bound to receive a negative annual progress report from the European
    Commission in November, since election campaigning took precedence
    over reform for most of the year.

    Babacan, who had a private meeting with Rehn on the sidelines of an
    EU foreign ministers' meeting in Portugal, shrugged off that
    prospect, calling the report "an outsider's view" and saying what
    mattered were the reforms Turkey carried out for its own sake.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy has opposed Turkey, a populous,
    poor, secular but overwhelmingly Muslim country on the edge of Europe
    and the Middle East, becoming an EU member.

    But he agreed last week to allow negotiations on most policy areas to
    proceed provided the EU appoints a panel of wise people in December
    to consider the future shape and borders of Europe.

    Rehn said the EU had just had a lengthy debate on its enlargement
    agenda and reached consensus at a summit last year, but a group of
    wise people could reflect on the EU's regional relationships with the
    Mediterranean area and northern Europe.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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